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Perseverance: The Juanita Black Story

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Juanita Black

Retired ‘Around the Block’ Coordinator juanita@sjhdc.ca
 
 
 

Around The Block

Around the Block is Saint John’s community newspaper, published six times annually by the Saint John Human Development Council with principal sponsorship from the City of Saint John. Since the first issue in 2008 ATB has been the voice of our priority neighbourhoods, celebrating their good news, providing information, and offering advocacy. These communities often send in stories written by the residents themselves. This newspaper is theirs; we encourage them to write in their own voices. You will also read stories from the many partners who help support our neighbourhoods with their programs, and special election inserts encouraging citizen participation.

 

Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 General Rate Application / Instance no 552 - Énergie NB Demande générale de tarifs 2024-2025

David Amos

<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
AttachmentMon, Jan 29, 2024 at 3:46 PM
To: Randy@sjhdc.ca


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Mitchell, Kathleen"<Kathleen.Mitchell@nbeub.ca>
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2023 20:27:07 +0000
Subject: Matter 552 - NB Power 2024-2025 General Rate Application /
Instance no 552 - Énergie NB Demande générale de tarifs 2024-2025
To: "louis-philippe.gauthier@cfib.ca"
<louis-philippe.gauthier@cfib.ca>, "frederic.gionet@cfib.ca"
<frederic.gionet@cfib.ca>, "David.Raymond.Amos333@gmail.com"
<David.Raymond.Amos333@gmail.com>, "david.sollows@gnb.ca"
<david.sollows@gnb.ca>, "Daly, Gerard"<daly@nbnet.nb.ca>,
"hanrahan.dion@jdirving.com"<hanrahan.dion@jdirving.com>,
"gzacher@stikeman.com"<gzacher@stikeman.com>,
"dave.lavigne@libertyutilities.com"
<dave.lavigne@libertyutilities.com>,
"Gilles.volpe@libertyutilities.com"
<Gilles.volpe@libertyutilities.com>, "JohnFurey@fureylegal.com"
<JohnFurey@fureylegal.com>, "jpetrie@nbpower.com"
<jpetrie@nbpower.com>, "SWaycott@nbpower.com"<SWaycott@nbpower.com>,
"DAMurphy@nbpower.com"<DAMurphy@nbpower.com>, "bcrawford@nbpower.com"
<bcrawford@nbpower.com>, "lgordon@nbpower.com"<lgordon@nbpower.com>,
"nbpregulatory@nbpower.com"<nbpregulatory@nbpower.com>, NBEUB/CESPNB
<General@nbeub.ca>, "Young, Dave"<Dave.Young@nbeub.ca>,
"Aherrington@lawsoncreamer.com"<Aherrington@lawsoncreamer.com>,
"Dickie, Michael"<Michael.Dickie@nbeub.ca>, "Mitchell, Kathleen"
<Kathleen.Mitchell@nbeub.ca>, Veronique Otis
<Veronique.Otis@nbeub.ca>, Susan Colwell <Susan.Colwell@nbeub.ca>,
Melissa Curran <Melissa.Curran@nbeub.ca>, "rdk@indecon.com"
<rdk@indecon.com>, "tyler.rajeski@twinriverspaper.com"
<tyler.rajeski@twinriverspaper.com>,
"darcy.ouellette@twinriverspaper.com"
<darcy.ouellette@twinriverspaper.com>, "Hoyt, Len"
<len.hoyt@mcinnescooper.com>, "paul.black@twinriverspaper.com"
<paul.black@twinriverspaper.com>, "tammy.grieve@mcinnescooper.com"
<tammy.grieve@mcinnescooper.com>, "jeff.garrett@sjenergy.com"
<jeff.garrett@sjenergy.com>, "shelley.wood@sjenergy.com"
<shelley.wood@sjenergy.com>, "dan.dionne@perth-andover.com"
<dan.dionne@perth-andover.com>, "pierreroy@edmundston.ca"
<pierreroy@edmundston.ca>, "pzarnett@bdrenergy.com"
<pzarnett@bdrenergy.com>, "sstoll@stollprofcorp.com"
<sstoll@stollprofcorp.com>, "randy@sjhdc.ca"<randy@sjhdc.ca>, Moe
Qureshi <moe.qureshi@conservationcouncil.ca>, "Chiasson, Alain
(OAG/CPG"<Alain.Chiasson2@gnb.ca>

Good afternoon,

Please find attached an Order and a Notice from the New Brunswick
Energy and Utilities Board.


Bonjour,

S'il vous plait trouver ci-joint une ordonnance et un avis de la
Commission de l'énergie et des services publics du Nouveau-Brunswick.



Kathleen Mitchell
Executive Director, Human Resources & Communications, and Chief Clerk
Directrice exécutive, Ressources humaines et communications, et
Greffière en chef
(506) 658-2504 (General/Général)
(506) 643-7324 (Direct/Directe)
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Documentary celebrates Saint John woman's decades of anti-poverty work

Juanita Black of Crescent Valley subject of short film

Juanita Black moved to Crescent Valley in 1979, and a community garden behind her house is just one example of how she made the north-end neighbourhood a home for herself and others.

Black is the subject of a new documentary called 'Perseverance: The Juanita Black Story,' written and produced by Kate Wallace and filmed and edited by Jordan Mattie.

It tells the story of how Black, a person who lived in poverty and received income assistance, lifted herself out of that situation through community involvement and nearly five decades of giving back. 

"Once you start doing a little bit of volunteering or going to a meeting and seeing people, they all come together," Black told Information Morning Saint John.


Black described the neighbourhood she lived in before moving to Crescent Valley as being a little rough around the edges in the early days. She said she had no hot water and didn't have a fire escape.

"We didn't work together, we weren't there helping each other out," she said.

Black said she learned about community involvement at a young age from her mother, who would volunteer at events and take Black with her.

In 2008, she took a course called Power-Up, a class that taught women how to help themselves and others. From there, Black started volunteering for a community newsletter called Around the Block. 

This led to her becoming the newsletter's coordinator, the first paid job that would transition her off income assistance. 

Black was also one of the founding members of the Crescent Valley community garden, and for 12 years she sat as an original board member of the Economic and Social Inclusion Corporation to reduce poverty, which also had members like Derek Oland of Moosehead Breweries. 

Juanita Black was one of the founding members of the Crescent Valley Community Garden. (Jordan Mattie/Submitted)

Black still lives in Crescent Valley, and she still loves being part of the community. She said last weekend she made French toast for everyone in her building.

"It shows people that I take pride in where I live."

Behind the scenes 

Kate Wallace was first contacted about the documentary idea last summer.

An ad hoc committee made up of community activists and government representatives wanted to make a video celebrating Black's achievements. They already had an inventory of all her volunteer work, her letters to the editors, and her awards.

"I think it ran to something like seven or eight pages," Wallace told Information Morning Saint John


Wallace and Mattie had an abundance of material to work with - Wallace said Black has a filing cabinet filled with every clipping, every letter, and every award and acknowledgement she's ever received.

Wallace said the filmmakers wanted to feature essential voices in the documentary. 

For example, Kaitlyn LeBlanc, the 2021 recipient of the Juanita Black Bursary, which helps a student from the Crescent Valley neighbourhood pursue a post-secondary education. Brenda Murphy, the long-time Saint John community activist and current lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick, was also interviewed.

Once the documentary was released, Black said the comments and messages started flooding in, including from people she knew in high school, like her guidance counsellor Cheryl Robertson.

You don't always know what impact you have

After Robertson saw the documentary about Black, she wanted to call her. 

Robertson had only seen Black a few times in the years since she was her guidance counsellor at Simonds High School in 1974. 

"I remember quite a bit about Juanita back in those days, and that's why I wanted to call her, because I felt so proud of her and her achievements and her journey, which has been challenging," Robertson told CBC News.

Black was the student council president in her graduating year at Simonds, as well as the chief of the student police, and she frequently spent time in the guidance counsellor resource area.

In a yearbook from 1974 that Robertson dug out of her basement, an entry about Black gives her the nickname 'Moose' and says she wanted to work with children.

     A 1974 Simonds high school yearbook entry about Juanita Black. (Cheryl Robertson)

During their conversation on the phone, Robertson, who left Simonds in 1982 to work at the New Brunswick Community College, said Black told her she was one of the people who helped her stay in high school. 

"That was very nice to hear," she said. "You don't always know what impact you have."

"It's pretty special," she said. "That was my role, was to listen to the concerns of students and try to help them sort through their difficulties and encourage them and provide whatever support you could."

With files from Information Morning Saint John

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices




Perseverance: The Juanita Black Story

38 subscribers
3,972 viewsJan 25, 2022Juanita Black is a long-time advocate for building a more caring community, and her powerful message is captured in an inspiring new documentary film that’s launching today. Perseverance: The Juanita Black Story charts more than 30 years she’s spent as a volunteer, poverty advocate, mentor, philanthropist and neighbourhood leader. As someone who has lived in poverty, Juanita has a fierce determination for fairness and justice that she has demonstrated at the local, provincial and national levels. And, finally, consider how you can give back. As Juanita shows us, it takes everyone working together to make meaningful change, and there are many ways to contribute: volunteer, make a donation, write a letter, join a committee, etc. Juanita illustrates the power of one working with the power of many to bring about change!

11 Comments


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/around-the-block-saint-john-community-newspaper-funding-stops-1.7114494

Saint John newspaper folds after 15 years serving lower-income neighbourhoods

Non-profit that published paper says it wants to use the city money to collect data instead

Juanita Black has a humble demeanour as she recalls the early days of starting her local newspaper.

But as she thumbs through the first and last editions, her smile betrays the facade that this was a simple endeavour.

"It's changed my life, this little newsletter," she said.

"It's just like the engine that could, and we did. And I think a lot of people are proud of it."

WATCH | Former editor Juanita Black on the newspaper's loyal following:
 

After 15 years, this small community newspaper in Saint John is closing

Duration 2:00
Around the Block served the five lowest-income neighbourhoods in Saint John and focused on good news stories in the community.

Black created the newspaper Around the Block in 2008 and was its original editor. Each edition saw 6,000 copies delivered.

The paper featured about 20 pages of stories about local charities, school updates, events, obituaries, poetry, and a fresh fruit and vegetable giveaway contest. There were also advertisements from local businesses and politicians.

Until this month, it served Saint John's five priority neighbourhoods that see the lowest levels of education and highest poverty rates in the city.

 Around The BlockAround the Block had an annual budget of about $20,000, which the city provided to the Human Development Council, which published the newspaper. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

It was published in hard copy every other month, for a total of 93 editions, by the Human Development Council with city funding.

Deputy Mayor John MacKenzie said the Human Development Council asked the city to shift funding from the newspaper to the group's data collection efforts.

"The city had no input into what was going to happen with the newspaper, nor did we say there wasn't going to be funding or anything like that," Mackenzie said.

He said there was a discussion with the Human Development Council that led to the shift in funding, but the city had no input in the decision.

Randy Hatfield, the Human Development Council executive director, said beyond the roughly $20,000 annual budget to pay staff, the business model used ad revenue and business sponsorship to cover delivery.

"And that no longer works," Hatfield said. "We're not immune in the community sector from general change in funding models and business models in media."

Randy Hatfield Randy Hatfield, executive director of the Human Development Council, says the print funding model wasn't working and it was a challenge to keep up the paper. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

He added that it was difficult to quantify the newspaper's influence in order to justify the funding.

"I can tell you how many issues were produced, I can't tell you how that filtered through into the community level," Hatfield said.

Funding from the city came on an annual basis, which was difficult to manage, he said.

Last year, the money came late so the newspaper had to start out the year without money, he said.

"It was just becoming a drag on our revenues to sustain it."

Times are changing, founder says

Black said she started the paper to highlight good news stories in the neighbourhoods Around the Block served, which were Crescent Valley, the old north end, lower west side, Waterloo Village and the south end.

It was a community newspaper that brought the community together, she said and catered to a demographic that enjoyed reading a physical print copy instead of a virtual paper.

"It's sad, and I'm sad, but times are changing, I think," Black said.

Juanita Black poses for a photo Black says the newspaper brought communities together. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

"Media's not the same as it used to be, print media's not the same as it used to be."

Her proudest moment was when Prince Charles and Camilla visited town in 2012, and Black later sent them a copy of the newspaper's coverage on the royal visit.

"Honest to god, they answered us back," she said, explaining that she received a note from the royals saying that her newspaper had been received.

"They can't say the paper hasn't been viewed, because it's been viewed from the top right down."  

Funding for data collection

Hatfield said the newspaper's end is a natural progression, but noted that the priority neighbourhoods have "strengthened" since 2008.

Most now have community centres and newsletters of their own, he said.

Now, he said, city money that previously went to Around the Block will be used for a community data portal to gather statistics for each neighbourhood on topics such as food insecurity and food bank use.  

Ogden said he wasn't a part of the decision to shift the funding, but he always placed ads with Around the Blocak and would write articles for them when asked.

Information is important for vulnerable communities, he said, and the newspaper was trying to break down barriers.

A neighbourhood in Saint John Funding that previously went to the paper will now be used for data collection in the five priority neighbourhoods, Hatfield says. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

"This was a way for Saint John to keep in touch with itself."

The final edition features pages of contributors and advertisers saying how much the paper meant to them and the community.

Black said the paper couldn't simply end without thanking its readers.

"We needed that final finish line," she said, "We needed to say goodbye, and this issue is saying goodbye."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King's College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

With files from Rachel Cave

 https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/09/what-isnt-wrong-with-journalism-today.html

 


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/dalton-camp-lecturer-journalism-1.5298703

'What isn't wrong with journalism today?' asks Dalton Camp lecturer

Industry faces a 'crisis of funding,' but that's just the tip of the iceberg





17 Comments 
Commenting is now closed for this story.



David Raymond Amos
I attended this evening and was the first to ask professor Emily Bell a question Methinks it should prove interesting to see if I am edited out N'esy Pas?  




Chuck MacDonald
Fake liberal news just like the cbc is


Jake Devries 
Reply to @Chuck MacDonald: "CBC: Heal Thyself".


Pete Prosser
Reply to @Chuck MacDonald: And you are here....why???


David Raymond Amos
Reply to @pete prosser: Methinks its for the same reasons I am After all we all own CBC N'esy Pas?





Jebidoah Shylah
Journalists are too politically biased these days to be arbiters of truth. Look at marijuana, now that it's been legalized, we hear nothing negative about it. We're meant to believe that it's all just sunshine and roses and not a negative at all.


David Raymond Amos 
Reply to @Jebidoah Shylah: I don't mean to burst your bubble but journalists were too politically biased

Methinks you should watch that old movie Citizen Kane or Network from the seventies or Wag the Dog etc etc etc Sometimes fiction reveals the awful truth of it all However the TRUTH is stranger than fiction N'esy Pas?


David Raymond Amos
Reply to @David Raymond Amos: Ooops I meant journalists "always" were too politically biased 





Jebidoah Shylah
Our supposed impartial public taxpayer funded broadcaster is a prime example of everything that is wrong with journalism today. Say anything in favour of Christianity or against drugs like marijuana and they often don't even allow it to be printed.


Jake Devries
Reply to @Jebidoah Shylah: or anti-Proggie


David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Jake Devries: Oh So True




Mac Isaac
 Many of the problems with journalism has to do with the cost of producing quality journalism...because of this cost, it's left to the wealthy and/or VERY wealthy to help finance it. The problem originates at that point, because many (emphatically NOT all) of those paying the bills feel they have some sort of "right" to determine "what" that news is; if it suits their viewpoint and , if it doesn't, how they can jury-rig it so that it does. A classic case in point is the Irving chain of newspapers which have handed off all or almost al of their news and editorial writing (it surely cannot still be referred to as journalism!) to the right wing Postmedia network. But the interesting thing is this happened a lot in past decades and even past centuries...yellow journalism is one of the terms coined in another time when free wheeling writers wrote inflammatory (often scurrilous, slanderous) articles about any who disagreed with them and/or their owners! The problem accelerated a great deal in the last 30 years when many national award-winning outlets had to close shop due to high costs.
It comes down to this: a society gets the news, and governments, it deserves. If the public wants better news and news reporting and news editorials, then they must have the guts to demand it. Having or expecting government to correct things only exacerbates the problem; replacing a bad situation with an even worse one. "The one who pays the piper, calls the tune" couldn't be more appropriate!



David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Mac Isaac: Yea Right




Joe Rootliek
Unfair, unbaised, opinion matters. Not what is social trending on an agenda.


David Raymond Amos 

Reply to @Joe Rootliek: Methinks you are confused N'esy Pas?






SteveRyan
Between CBC and their pro government slant, and the current government handing out $600 million to selected media outlets, it's difficult to put trust in these companies.


David Raymond Amos  
Reply to @SteveRyan: YUP






---------- Original message ----------
From: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 09:23:25 -0300
Subject: YO Madame Bell Need I say I enjoy it when the computers controlled by unethical
Crown Counsels and Premiers act ethically?
To: Client.Advocate@gnb.ca, jennifer.russell@gnb.ca, Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca, Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca,
hugh.flemming@gnb.ca, john.green@gnb.ca, andre@jafaust.com, mcu@justice.gc.ca, barbara.massey@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, carl.urquhart@gnb.ca, Kevin.Vickers@gnb.ca,
Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.caDavid.Coon@gnb.ca, kris.austin@gnb.ca, blaine.higgs@gnb.ca, premier@gnb.ca, premier@ontario.ca, PREMIER@gov.ns.ca, pm@pm.gc.ca, Nathalie.Drouin@justice.gc.ca, jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca, megan.mitton@gnb.ca,
michelle.conroy@gnb.ca, rick.desaulniers@gnb.ca, kevin.a.arseneau@gnb.ca,
ebell@columbia.edu, sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.ca, Catherine.Tait@cbc.ca,
martine.turcotte@bell.capablo.rodriguez@parl.gc.ca, Melanie.Joly@parl.gc.caed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk, Newsroom@globeandmail.com, DDrummond@google.complee@stu.ca, Jacques.Poitras@cbc.caRobert.Jones@cbc.ca, darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca,
 jbosnitch@gmail.com, margot.cragg@umnb.camark.vespucci@ci.irs.gov,
markandcaroline@gmail.com, COCMoncton@gmail.com
Cc: motomaniac333@gmail.com, Gerald.Butts@pmo-cpm.gc.ca, Paul.Shuttle@pco-bcp.gc.ca, Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca, Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Jensen, Jan"<jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 12:04:32 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Methinks no matter what your pals Chucky and
Gerald claim we know the malevolent Mr Higgs did not tell a lie about
the crap farmers are spraying N'esy Pas Davey Baby Coon?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I will be out of office until Monday September 30, 2019.   If you
require immediate assistance, please contact my assistant at (902) 407
7461.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Premier of Ontario | Premier ministre de l’Ontario <Premier@ontario.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 12:04:35 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Methinks no matter what your pals Chucky and
Gerald claim we know the malevolent Mr Higgs did not tell a lie about
the crap farmers are spraying N'esy Pas Davey Baby Coon?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email. Your thoughts, comments and input are greatly valued.

You can be assured that all emails and letters are carefully read,
reviewed and taken into consideration.

There may be occasions when, given the issues you have raised and the
need to address them effectively, we will forward a copy of your
correspondence to the appropriate government official. Accordingly, a
response may take several business days.

Thanks again for your email.
______­­

Merci pour votre courriel. Nous vous sommes très reconnaissants de
nous avoir fait part de vos idées, commentaires et observations.

Nous tenons à vous assurer que nous lisons attentivement et prenons en
considération tous les courriels et lettres que nous recevons.

Dans certains cas, nous transmettrons votre message au ministère
responsable afin que les questions soulevées puissent être traitées de
la manière la plus efficace possible. En conséquence, plusieurs jours
ouvrables pourraient s’écouler avant que nous puissions vous répondre.

Merci encore pour votre courriel.



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Premier <PREMIER@novascotia.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 12:04:44 +0000
Subject: Automatic Reply
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email to Premier McNeil.

This is an automatic confirmation your email has been received.

Warmest Regards,

Premier's Correspondence Team


On 9/27/19, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:

> http://charlesotherpersonalitie.blogspot.com/2019/09/catching-new-brunswick-premier-blaine.html
>
>
> Thursday, 26 September 2019
>
> Catching New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs on a LIE on the issue of
> SPRAYING!!!!
>
> https://youtu.be/qPpxQK5tfbM
>
> This is the video-----
>
> https://youtu.be/SmJW5kaO5Uk
>
> Posted by Charles Leblanc at 1:56 pm
>



---------- Original message ----------
From: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 08:20:41 -0300
Subject: Good Morning Madame Bell I inroduced myself last night perhaps we should
talk before you leave Fredericton
To: ebell@columbia.edu, sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.ca, Catherine.Tait@cbc.ca, martine.turcotte@bell.ca, pablo.rodriguez@parl.gc.ca, Melanie.Joly@parl.gc.ca
Cc: motomaniac333@gmail.com, DDrummond@google.com, plee@stu.ca,
Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca, Robert.Jones@cbc.ca, darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca

My cell number  is XXX XXX XXXX

This was an email I sent to my political opponents last evening before
I read the article about you in CBC.  They were going to a debate that
I was not invited to so I decided to go embarrass Philip Lee and his
many cohorts in a public forum.


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/dalton-camp-lecturer-journalism-1.5298703

'What isn't wrong with journalism today?' asks Dalton Camp lecturer

Industry faces a 'crisis of funding,' but that's just the tip of the iceberg
Jordan Gill · CBC News · Posted: Sep 26, 2019 5:02 PM AT


'I think that we have to rethink how we get journalism back into
communities at a local level,' says journalism professor Emily Bell.
(Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images)


7 Comments

David Amos
I attended this evening and was the first to ask professor Emily Bell
a question Methinks it should prove interesting to see if I am edited
out N'esy Pas?

https://journalism.columbia.edu/faculty/emily-bell

Email: ebell@columbia.edu
Phone: 212-854-1945
Pulitzer Hall, Room 201MC
Twitter:
@emilybell (link is external)


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 26 Sep 2019 17:18:11 -0300
Subject: Enjoy your debate in Petitcodiac tonight Perhaps you folks should
ask the lawyers Maxime Bernier andRob Moore and former MP Alaina Lockhart
to explain my lawsuit and the documents hereto attached
To: tim.thompson@greenparty.ca, rudolf_neumayer@yahoo.ca,
robmoorefundy@gmail.com, alaina@alainalockhart.ca,
john.evans@gmail.com
Cc: motomaniac333@gmail.com

https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2015/09/v-behaviorurldefaultvmlo.html

 David Raymond Amos Versus The Crown T-1557-15



                      Court File No. T-1557-15

FEDERAL COURT

BETWEEN:
DAVID RAYMOND AMOS

                           Plaintiff
and

HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN

                           Defendant

STATEMENT OF CLAIM

The Parties

1.      HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN (Crown) is Elizabeth II, the Queen of
England, the Protector of the Faith of the Church of England, the
longest reigning monarch of the United Kingdom and one of the
wealthiest persons in the world. Canada pays homage to the Queen
because she remained the Head of State and the Chief Executive Officer
of Canada after the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.) 1982, c. 11 came into force
on April 17, 1982. The standing of the Queen in Canada was explained
within the 2002 Annual Report FORM 18-K filed by Canada with the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). It states as
follows:

     “The executive power of the federal Government is vested in the
Queen, represented by the Governor General, whose powers are exercised
on the advice of the federal Cabinet, which is responsible to the
House of Commons. The legislative branch at the federal level,
Parliament, consists of the Crown, the Senate and the House of
Commons.”

     “The executive power in each province is vested in the Lieutenant
Governor, appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the
federal Cabinet. The Lieutenant Governor’s powers are exercised on the
advice of the provincial cabinet, which is responsible to the
legislative assembly. Each provincial legislature is composed of a
Lieutenant Governor and a legislative assembly made up of members
elected for a period of five years.”

2.      Her Majesty the Queen is the named defendant pursuant to
sections 23(1) and 36 of the Crown Liability and Proceedings Act. Some
of the state actors whose duties and actions are at issue in this
action are the Prime Minister, Premiers, Governor General, Lieutenant
Governors, members of the Canadian Forces (CF), and Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP), federal and provincial Ministers of Public
Safety, Ministers of Justice, Ministers of Finance, Speakers, Clerks,
Sergeants-at-Arms and any other person acting as Aide-de-Camp
providing security within and around the House of Commons, the
legislative assemblies or acting as security for other federal,
provincial and municipal properties.

3.      Her Majesty the Queen’s servants the RCMP whose mandate is to
serve and protect Canadian citizens and assist in the security of
parliamentary properties and the protection of public officials should
not deny a correspondence from a former Deputy Prime Minister who was
appointed to be Canada’s first Minister of Public Safety in order to
oversee the RCMP and their cohorts. The letter that helped to raise
the ire of a fellow Canadian citizen who had never voted in his life
to run for public office four times thus far is quoted as follows:


etc etc etc



---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2019 08:40:56 -0300
Subject: Madame Bell Whereas you write for the Guardian why not ask Ed
Pilkington if I am a liar or not?
To: ebell@columbia.edu, ed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk
Cc: motomaniac333@gmail.com, plee@stu.ca

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ed Pilkington <ed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk>
Subject: GUARDIAN
To: David Amos
Date: Wednesday, August 3, 2011, 11:42 AM


hi

here's my email and my cell number is below

all best

Ed

--
Ed Pilkington
New York bureau chief
The Guardian
www.guardian.co.uk
twitter.com/Edpilkington

Cell: 646 704 1264
Please consider the environment before printing this email.
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Guardian News & Media Limited

A member of Guardian Media Group plc
Registered Office
PO Box 68164
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N1P 2AP

Registered in England Number 908396

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2019 05:29:30 -0400
Subject: YO Birgitta Jonsdottir Priority
To: jerrydfowler49@gmail.com, jesus_hernandez@fd.org,
Elizabeth_Molina@fd.org, washington.field@ic.fbi.gov,
Boston.Mail@ic.fbi.gov, rosa.e.rodriguez@usdoj.gov,
ginette.milanes2@usdoj.gov, Newsroom@globeandmail.com,
news@kingscorecord.com, news-tips@nytimes.com,
brian.donohue@usdoj.gov, mark.gallagher@usdoj.gov,
luis.rivera-santana@ic.fbi.gov, douglas.leff@ic.fbi.gov,
martin.gaudet@fredericton.ca, Leanne.Fitch@fredericton.ca,
frederictonnewsteam@bellmedia.ca, darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca,
martine.turcotte@bell.ca, lionel@lionelmedia.com,
Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca, william.barr@usdoj.gov,
Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca,
Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Cc: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com, Larry.Tremblay@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
news@dailygleaner.com, steve.murphy@ctv.ca,
stateofcorruptionnh1@gmail.com, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
andre@jafaust.com, jbosnitch@gmail.com,
birgittajoy@gmail.com, birgitta@this.is, editor@grapevine.is,
ed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk, editor@wikileaks.org


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Hon.Ralph.Goodale  (PS/SP)"<Hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2019 09:26:45 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE I finally got my evidence to TRUMP and he
sent it to John Jimenez section chief of the public Corruption and
Civil Rights section of the FBI
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Merci d'avoir ?crit ? l'honorable Ralph Goodale, ministre de la
S?curit? publique et de la Protection civile.
En raison d'une augmentation importante du volume de la correspondance
adress?e au ministre, veuillez prendre note qu'il pourrait y avoir un
retard dans le traitement de votre courriel. Soyez assur? que votre
message sera examin? avec attention.
Merci!
L'Unit? de la correspondance minist?rielle
S?curit? publique Canada
*********

Thank you for writing to the Honourable Ralph Goodale, Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness.
Due to the significant increase in the volume of correspondence
addressed to the Minister, please note there could be a delay in
processing your email. Rest assured that your message will be
carefully reviewed.
Thank you!
Ministerial Correspondence Unit
Public Safety Canada




---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Birgitta Jonsdottir <birgitta@this.is>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2019 02:26:31 -0700
Subject: e-mail overload Re: RE I finally got my evidence to TRUMP and
he sent it to John Jimenez section chief of the public Corruption and
Civil Rights section of the FBI
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com


Thank you for writing to me. I get so many emails that it is
impossible for me to even read them all. If you have an urgent matter
to discuss. Please put Priority in the subject. Please refrain from
sending email to multitude of email addresses you might have for me.
Only send one email with priority in the subject. It means I will read
it and will do my very best to reply asap :)



On 5/2/19, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:


> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Jerry Fowler <jerrydfowler49@gmail.com>
> Date: Thu, 2 May 2019 02:02:29 -0500
> Subject: Re: I finally got my evidence to TRUMP and he sent it to John
> Jimenez section chief of the public Corruption and Civil Rights
> section of the FBI in Washington DC. Copy of the letter from John
> Jimenez. I have received two phone calls telling me if I don't drop
> this I could end up dead but I have No intension of letting this go. I
> talked to two men at the White House and they said to get this on the
> National News so they will be forced to investigate this. I asked
> William Lamar the US Attorney In Oxford Mississippi to investigate the
> edited Highway Patrol Dash Cam entered in Lowndes County Court and
> Federal Court MAJOR FELONY and the obstruction of Justice in the
> attempted cover up the edited Highway Patrol Dash that involves 2
> Assistant Attorney Generals Jerry Younger and Bill Minor 4 people at
> the Highway Patrol and 5 people at the Lowndes County Court House and
> possibly a Federal Judge Sharon Adcock. And I also asked William Lamar
> to investigate all the cases of Forrest Allgood
> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>
> Copy of the information my friend are SHARING.
> Brian go to my Facebook page for more information contact
> jerrydfowler49@gmail.com or call. 662-251-8726
>
> On Fri, Apr 19, 2019, 10:25 PM David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: "Jerry Fowler"<jerrydfowler49@gmail.com>
>> Date: Feb 17, 2018 8:41 AM
>> Subject: I have received two phone calls telling me if
>> To: <OPRcustserv@cdsfulfillment.com>
>> Cc:
>>
>>
>> I didn't drop this I could end up dead. Google Radley Balko's article
>> on the former District Attorney In Columbus Mississippi Forrest
>> Allgood prosecuter Misconduct Fake Experts and discredited State
>> Medical examiner Steven Haynes, 1000s Suspect Convictions and possibly
>> 100s of innocent people are still in jail. The innocent project came
>> to Columbus and freed two people Forrest Allgood put on death row and
>> after being presented with over whelming evidence of their innocence
>> Forrest Allgood fought there release for more than 7 years keeping
>> them in jail. Jim Hood the Attorney General used the same Fake Experts
>> as Forrest Allgood so he doesn't want anyone looking into this. Jim
>> Hood is protecting the ones that edited a Highway Patrol Dash Cam and
>> entered it into Federal Court MAJOR FELONY. I had Felesa Adams US
>> Attorney In Oxford Mississippi investigating the edited dash cam
>> entered in Federal Court and Trump replaced her and the FBI has
>> dropped the investigation and will not return my calls Frank Griffin
>> III the former owner and president of First Federal Bank in Columbus
>> and I have talked to 3 State Senators and a member of the Governor's
>> staff who said that the Governor will not get involved because he has
>> an agreement with Jim Hood the Attorney General. What kind of an
>> agreement does the Governor have that would prevent him from sending
>> an investigator to meet with me and look at my evidence??  My friends
>> have sent my information to Fox news and 3 different National News
>> networks and I have not heard anything from them. Maybe if I can get
>> this on the national news maybe they will be forced to investigate
>> this. 1000s Suspect Convictions and 100s innocent people are still in
>> jail. I can't believe that No one is interested in doing anything
>> about this. I have talked to two men at the White House and they gave
>> me a case number but it has been more than 6 months and I have not
>> heard anything from them. I need help to get it in the right person at
>> the Department of Justice. MAYBE Oprah'Winfrey can help get an
>> investigator to meet with me and look at my evidence, or get this on
>> the national news.  All I ask is for an investigator to meet with me
>> and look at my evidence.  I have received two phone calls telling me
>> if I don't drop this I could end up dead.  My brother is a Col Army
>> Ranger Special Forces Airborne and just got back from Korea said I
>> should ask Trump to send an investigator to meet with me and look at
>> my evidence. I can't even get our State Senators to help all they care
>> about is getting reelected, and everyone is afraid to go against the
>> highway patrol and the Attorney General office. I am trying to sell my
>> house and move before something bad happens. For more information
>> please 662-251-8726 jerrydfowler49@gmail.com
>>
>



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:00:10 -0300
Subject: RE Hero or Villain: The Prosecution of Julian Assange
To: NH@fbdlaw.com, birgittajoy <birgittajoy@gmail.com>, birgitta
<birgitta@this.is>, scott.shane@nytimes.com, mmiller@vianovo.com,
"ed.pilkington"<ed.pilkington@guardian.co.uk>, editor
<editor@wikileaks.org>, "Ian.Shugart"<Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca>,
"Kevin.leahy"<Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "pablo.rodriguez"
<pablo.rodriguez@parl.gc.ca>, "Paul.Shuttle"
<Paul.Shuttle@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, "hon.ralph.goodale"
<hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>, "barbara.massey"
<barbara.massey@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, postur <postur@for.is>,
postur@for.stjr.is, postur@fjr.stjr.is,
managingdirectorsoffice@abc.net.au
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Boston.Mail"
<Boston.Mail@ic.fbi.gov>, "Fred.Wyshak"<Fred.Wyshak@usdoj.gov>,
washington field <washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>

http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/04/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange.html

Thursday, 11 April 2019
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested, U.K. police say

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtelzRAPlT8

Hero or Villain: The Prosecution of Julian Assange | Four Corners
113,134 views
ABC News (Australia)
Published on Jul 22, 2019
Julian Assange is one of the most influential figures to emerge this
century. The Australian born founder of WikiLeaks has harnessed the
technology of the digital age to unleash an information war against
governments and corporations.

WikiLeaks has collaborated with anonymous sources to release highly
classified and often deeply embarrassing information to the world.

The organisation exploded onto the world stage in 2010 when it began
publishing a series of spectacular leaks laying bare the conduct of
the United States. At the centre of it all was Julian Assange.

The leaks sparked ferocious debate over the right to know and the
right to keep secrets.

Now Julian Assange is in the fight of his life. In April this year he
was dragged, protesting, from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, nearly
seven years after seeking diplomatic protection.

He is facing extradition to the United States on espionage charges
stemming from the spectacular 2010 leaks by Private Chelsea Manning.

Everyone has an opinion about Julian Assange, but now you will hear
from those who have been on the inside.

Four Corners investigates the prosecution of Julian Assange in key
interviews with those at the heart of WikiLeaks and those who have
sought to bring him to US justice. These insider accounts give
powerful insights into how these momentous events have unfolded.

For more from ABC News, click here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2PMvx8HZW0

The Ides of March 2010 for Al Jazeera Iceland WikiLeaks Zionists vs Mean Old Me
310 views
David Amos
Published on Apr 1, 2013
From: "David Amos"
To: "Julian Assange)"
Cc:"Dan Fitzgerald"danf@danf.netByrne.G@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Sunday, March 07, 2010 8:35 PM
Subject: Re: Al Jazeera on Iceland's new plan Thanx Here is something
about Iceland and Banksters Al Jazeera would enjoy


Checkout this old pdf file from 2005 at about page two or three


http://www.scribd.com/doc/4304560/Spe...


Then read on and chuckle


From: "Julian Assange)"editor@wikileaks.org
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Sent: Sunday, March 07, 2010 3:15 PM
Subject: Al Jazeera on Iceland's plan for a press safe haven

FYI: Al-Jazeera's take on Iceland's proposed media safe haven
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbGiPj...


More info http://immi.is/


Julian Assange

Editor

WikiLeaks

http://wikileaks.org//



From: postur@fjr.stjr.is
Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2009 15:06:39 +0000
Subject: Re: RE: Iceland and Bankers etc I must ask the obvious
question. Why have you people ignored me for three years?
To: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com


Dear David Amos

Unfortunately there has been a considerable delay in responding to

incoming letters due to heavy workload and many inquiries to our office.

We appreciate the issue raised in your letter. We have set up a web site

www.iceland.org where we have gathered various practical information

regarding the economic crisis in Iceland.

Greetings from the Ministry of Finance.

Tilvísun í mál: FJR08100024



From: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2008 13:57:55 -0300
Subject: Re: Regarding your enquiry to the Prime Ministry of Iceland
To: postur@for.stjr.is


Thanx


On 10/8/08, postur@for.stjr.ispostur@for.stjr.is wrote:

David Raymond Amos

Your enquiry has been received by the Prime Ministry of Iceland and
waits attendance.

Thank you.



From: Birgitta Jonsdottir birgittajoy@gmail.com
Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 07:14:02 +0000
Subject: Re: Bon Soir Birgitta according to my records this is the
first email I ever sent you
To: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com



dear Dave

i have got your email and will read through the links as soon as i

find some time keep up the good fight in the meantime


thank you for bearing with me

i am literary drowning in requests to look into all sorts of matters

and at the same time working 150% work at the parliament and

the creation of a political movement and being a responsible parent:)

plus all the matters in relation to immi


with oceans of joy

birgitta



http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2009/...



From: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com

Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 11:34:40 -0300

Subject: Fwd: USANYS-MADOFF AND IMPORTANT INFORMATION FROM US
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE SDNY

To: frank.pingue@thomsonreuters.com,
johanna.sigurdardottir@fel.stjr.is, postur@for.stjr.is, aih@cbc.ca,
Milliken.P@parl.gc.ca, sjs@althingi.is, emb.ottawa@mfa.is,
rmellish@pattersonlaw.ca, irisbirgisdottir@yahoo.ca,
grant.mccool@thomsonreuters.com, juan.lagorio@thomsonreuters.com,
"Robert. Jones"Robert.Jones@cbc.ca, marie@mariemorneau.com,
dfranklin@franklinlegal.com, egilla@althingi.is,
william.turner@exsultate.ca, klm@althingi.is, mail@fjr.stjr.is,
Edith.Cody-Rice@cbc.ca, wendy.williams@landsbanki.is,
cdhowe@cdhowe.org, desparois.sylviane@fcac.gc.ca, plee@stu.ca,
jonina.s.larusdottir@ivr.stjr.is, fyrirspurn@fme.is, audur@audur.is,
fme@fme.is, info@landsbanki.is, sedlabanki@sedlabanki.is, tif@tif.is

Cc: rfowlo@comcast.net, jmullen@townofmilton.org, webo@xplornet.com,
t.j.burke@gnb.ca, oldmaison@yahoo.com, Dan Fitzgerald danf@danf.net,
"spinks08@hotmail.com"spinks08@hotmail.com, gypsy-blog
gypsy-blog@hotmail.com, "nb. premier"nb.premier@gmail.com, nbpolitico
nbpolitico@gmail.com, "bruce.fitch"bruce.fitch@gnb.ca, "bruce.alec"
bruce.alec@gmail.com

I know that the Yankee law enforcement people are either as dumb as
posts or pure evil. There appears to be few exceptions. The ethical
Ms. Olson is my favourite klady today. Does anyone speaking or acting
in the best interests of the decent folks in Iceland understand my
sincerity and her Integrity YET?



Veritas Vincit

David Raymond Amos




https://fbdlaw.com/attorney-profiles/nancy-hollander/

Freedman Boyd Hollander Goldberg Urias & Ward
20 First Plaza, Suite 700 Albuquerque, NM 87102

Mailing Address
PO Box 25326 Albuquerque, NM 87125-0326
Call: 505.842.9960     Email: info@fbdlaw.com


----- Original Message -----
From: RathgB0@parl.gc.ca
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 11:52 AM
Subject: RE: Re Wikileaks and Pfc Manning etc I just called you Mr
Coombs my number is 902 800 0369 Correct?

Dear Mr. Amos,

On behalf of Mr. Rathgeber, we acknowledge receipt and thank you for your
email.

Please be assured that we will apprise Mr. Rathgeber of your
correspondence at our earliest opportunity.

Thank you for taking the time to contact Mr. Rathgeber.

Regards,

Verena Baxter

Legislative Assistant
Brent Rathgeber, Q.C., M.P.
Edmonton-St. Albert
(613) 996 4722
(613) 863 8477



https://www.bestlawyers.com/lawyers/vincent-j-ward/169327

Freedman Boyd Hollander Goldberg Urias & Ward P.A.
Headquarters
20 First Plaza, Suite 700
200 Third Street, NW
Albuquerque, NM 87125-0326
(505) 842.9960

http://www.fbdlaw.com


http://www.fbdlaw.com/NH

NH@FBDLAW.COM

Ms. Hollander has been a member of the firm since 1980 and a partner
since 1983. Her practice is largely devoted to representing
individuals and organizations accused of crimes, including those
involving national security issues. She has also been counsel in
numerous civil cases, forfeitures and administrative hearings, and has
argued and won a case involving religious freedom in the United States
Supreme Court. Ms. Hollander also served as a consultant to the
defense in a high profile terrorism case in Ireland and has assisted
counsel in other international cases. She currently represents two
prisoners at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base and is lead appellate counsel
for Chelsea Manning in the military appellate courts.

Ms. Hollander has taught in numerous trial practice programs,
including the National Criminal Defense College and Gerry Spence's
Trial College and at national and international seminars on various
subjects including the securing of evidence in international cases,
forfeiture, illegal search and seizure, expert witnesses, defense of
child abuse cases, ethics, evidence, and trial practice. She has
written extensively on these and other criminal law topics. (See
recent article, “Obtaining Evidence in the United States for Use by
the Defense in a Foreign Criminal Proceeding”). She has coordinated
and taught training courses for criminal defense lawyers wishing to
appear before the ICC and the ICTY, was the coordinator of a jury
trial training project in Russia and has served as a consultant to the
United Nations Development Programme in Vietnam.

In 2001, Ms. Hollander was named as one of America’s top fifty women
litigators by the National Law Journal. She has received the highest
Martindale-Hubbell “AV” rating, and is listed in The Best Lawyers in
America, the National Directory of Criminal Lawyers, and the
International Who’s Who of Business Crime Lawyers. She was chosen as
Best Lawyers’ Albuquerque Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar Lawyer of
the Year in 2010, White-Collar Lawyer of the Year in 2011 and General
Practice Lawyer of the Year in 2016.

In 2007, she was highlighted in Superlawyers, top twenty-five New
Mexico lawyers. She also received the Professional Lawyer of the Year
Award from the New Mexico Trial Lawyers Foundation in 2006.

She is co-author of WestGroup's Everytrial Criminal Defense Resource
Book, Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, 15th Edition, and Wharton’s
Criminal Procedure, 14th Edition.

Ms. Hollander is also an Associate Tenant with Doughty Street
Chambers, London. Doughty Street Chambers has an international
practice including criminal law, international law and human rights.

Education

University of Michigan, B.A. 1965 (Cum Laude)

University of New Mexico School of Law, J.D. 1978 (Magna Cum Laude)



Professional Associations/Activities

President, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, 1992-93

Fellow, American College of Trial Lawyers, 2004-present

Fellow, American Board of Criminal Lawyers, 1994-present

Founding Member, Council, International Criminal Bar, 2003-2005

Member, Board of Directors, International Criminal Defence Attorneys, 2003-2007

Member, European Criminal Bar Association, 2003-present

http://www.fbdlaw.com/VJW

VJW@FBDLAW.com

Vincent specializes in complex litigation and class actions involving
government entities, insurance companies, and financial institutions.
He also represents clients in administrative proceedings, including
security clearance suspensions, professional licensure revocations,
and debarments. Prior to joining the firm, Vincent held high level
positions in both federal and state government. Most recently he
served as Senior Counselor to Solicitor Hilary Tompkins at the United
States Department of Interior, where he counseled the Secretary,
Deputy Secretary, Solicitor and other high-level officials on issues
pertaining to civil litigation (oil and gas, Indian gaming, false
claims/whistleblower claims, employment, and tort claims),
procurement, federal ethics requirements, congressional inquiries, and
FOIA. The Solicitor assigned him to work on the Department's most
important issues, including the Gulf Oil Spill response, Cobell Class
Action lawsuit, and the Secretary's Renewable Energy Fast-Track
Program.

Vincent also served as Chief and Deputy Chief Counsel to the former
Governor of New Mexico, Bill Richardson. In this capacity, Vincent
advised the Governor, Chief of Staff, and other senior officials in
the administration on legal and policy issues, including rule-making
and administrative procedures, procurement, IPRA and Open Meetings,
constitutional authority and statutory interpretation, judicial and
exempt/political appointments, and civil litigation (employment and
tort claims). He also supervised the general counsels in more than 20
state executive agencies.

From 2001 to 2004, Vincent served on active duty in the United States
Navy, Judge Advocate General Corps, where he prosecuted felony level
criminal offenses, including the mishandling of classified materials,
murder, sexual assault, and drug distribution. He also represented the
Navy in administrative separation proceedings and conducted internal
investigations for senior military commanders.

Vincent graduated from the University of New Mexico School of Law in
2001, where he was awarded the Sutin Award for Excellence in Advocacy
and the Helen S. Carter Prize for Outstanding Legal Writing. Vincent
holds a B.A. in Political Science, Summa Cum Laude, from the
University of New Mexico. The State Bar of New Mexico recognized
Vincent as the Outstanding Young Lawyer of the Year in 2008. The New
Mexico Business Weekly named Vincent as a Top 40 under 40 honoree in
2012.

Education

University of New Mexico, B.A.

University of New Mexico School of Law




https://vianovo.com/contact



https://vianovo.com/people/matthew-miller

Matthew Miller has worked at the highest levels of government,
campaigns, and corporations as a trusted advisor, communications
strategist and crisis counselor to political and business leaders.

Before joining Vianovo, Matt served as the Director of the Office of
Public Affairs for the Department of Justice, leading the Department’s
communications team and serving as Attorney General Eric Holder’s
spokesman.

Matt has worked in leadership positions in both the U.S. House and
Senate, serving as communications director for the House Democratic
Caucus and for Senator Charles Schumer at the Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Committee, where he helped Democrats win eight Senate seats
in 2008. He has also worked for Senator Robert Menendez, and in 2004
led the Kerry presidential campaign’s Florida press operation,
directing research, communications, and rapid response.

Matt previously worked as Senior Strategist at Public Strategies. A
graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, he is an MSNBC
contributor and has written for the Washington Post, Time Magazine,
Politico and other publications.

We look forward to telling your story

633 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington D.C. 20004
202.783.0277
cell
202 2551594


https://smpa.gwu.edu/pj-crowley

Home Faculty Part-Time Faculty P.J. Crowley
Phillip J. Crowley
P.J. Crowley

Title:
    Professorial Lecturer
Address:
    School of Media and Public Affairs
    805 21st Street NW
    Suite 508B
    Washington, District Of Columbia 20052
Phone:
    202-994-6365
Email:
    pjcrowley@gwu.edu




---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2019 11:38:25 -0400
Subject: Re: Attn James Goodale RE Your opinions aired on CBC this
weekend about Assange I just called and talked to your assistant
Correct?
To: jcgoodal@debevoise.com, jakierna@debevoise.com,
news-tips@nytimes.com, froomkin@whitehousewatch.com, dan@froomkin.com,
mdcohen212@gmail.com, j.robinson@doughtystreet.co.uk, paulhare@bu.edu,
rfife@globeandmail.com, Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.ca,
Jane.Philpott@parl.gc.ca, jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca,
Nathalie.Drouin@justice.gc.ca, theresa.may.mp@parliament.uk,
mayt@parliament.ukpm@pm.gc.ca, Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca,
Zachary.terwilliger@usdoj.gov, tracy.mccormick@usdoj.gov,
joshua.stueve@usdoj.gov, william.barr@usdoj.gov,
Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca,
washington.field@ic.fbi.gov, bpollack@robbinsrussell.com
Cc: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com, Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca,
Newsroom@globeandmail.comnews@dailygleaner.com,
news@kingscorecord.com>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.ca
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2019 14:38:33 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Attn James Goodale RE Your opinions aired on
CBC this weekend about Assange Perhaps we should talk
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

Thank you for writing to the Honourable Jody Wilson-Raybould, Member
of Parliament for Vancouver Granville.

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Thank you

-------------------

Merci d'?crire ? l'honorable Jody Wilson-Raybould, d?put?e de
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On 4/15/19, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:
> https://www.cbc.ca/radio/day6/assange-arrested-the-brexit-whistleblower-game-of-thrones-composer-celebrating-fan-fiction-and-more-1.5092753/the-lawyer-who-defended-the-pentagon-papers-publication-says-it-s-time-to-stand-up-for-julian-assange-1.5092761
>
>
> The lawyer who defended the Pentagon Papers' publication says it's
> time to stand up for Julian Assange
>
> James Goodale says if Assange is indicted, it will threaten national
> security reporting
> CBC Radio · Posted: Apr 12, 2019 6:10 PM ET | Last Updated: April 13
>
> James C. Goodale
> Debevoise & Plimpton
> 919 Third Avenue
> New York, NY 10022
>
> Tel: 212 909 6253
> Fax: 212 909 6836
> jcgoodal@debevoise.com
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
> Date: Mon, 11 Dec 2017 15:53:36 -0400
> Subject: YO Norman Eisen Re My calls today about your lack of ethics
> To: Norman.Eisen@gmail.com, info@citizensforethics.org,
> jakierna@debevoise.com, NEisen@brookings.edu,
> BFinzen@robinskaplan.com, jdunbar@publicintegrity.org,
> jbennett@publicintegrity.org, tips@publicintegrity.org
> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, stateofcorruptionnh1
> <stateofcorruptionnh1@gmail.com>, "mark.vespucci"
> <mark.vespucci@ci.irs.gov>, George J Russell TIGTA
> <j.Russell.George@tigta.treas.gov>
>
> CREW
> 455 Massachusetts Avenue NW,
> Washington, DC 20001
> info@citizensforethics.org
> 202-408-5565
>
> Norman L. Eisen (born November 11, 1960[2]) is board chair of Citizens
> for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW).[3] He is an
> attorney who previously served as White House Special Counsel for
> Ethics and Government Reform and later United States Ambassador to the
> Czech Republic. He is also a senior fellow in Governance Studies at
> the Brookings Institution.[4]
>
> https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/20170317_norm_eisencv.pdf
>
> AMBASSADOR (ret.)
> NORMAN L. EISEN
> The Brookings Institution
> 1775 Mass. Ave. NW
> Washington, DC 20036
> (202) 238-3178
> NEisen@Brookings.edu
> Norman.Eisen@gmail.com
>
> https://www.publicintegrity.org/about/our-people/board-of-directors
>
> The Center for Public Integrity
> 910 17th Street, NW, Suite 700
> Washington, DC 20006
>
> Story tip-offs: tips@publicintegrity.org or 202-466-1300
>
> James A. Kiernan III
> Of Counsel
> jakierna@debevoise.com,
> Tel: +44 20 7786 9044
>
> Bruce A. Finzen
> Of Counsel
> BFinzen@RobinsKaplan.com
> 612.349.8459
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
> Date: Sat, 9 Dec 2017 10:35:00 -0400
> Subject: Fwd: Re My calls today about the Montreal Economic Institute
> To: contact@icij.org, s.bowers00@gmail.com, tom@tomstites.com
> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, "harvey.cashore"
> <harvey.cashore@cbc.ca>
>
> http://www.canadalandshow.com/podcast/man-behind-paradise-papers/
>
> Gerard Ryle is the director of the International Consortium of
> Investigative Journalists, who are behind the Paradise Papers, the
> Panama Papers and other similar investigations.
>
> Major revelations are continuing to come out of the Paradise Papers in
> Canada and around the world.
>
> One prominent columnist dismissed the whole thing as “another cheap
> shot at the wealthy,” while other people are asking why this story
> isn’t causing riots in the streets.
>
> https://www.icij.org/journalists/simon-bowers/
>
> Simon Bowers has been a reporter for the ICIJ on its Paradise Papers
> project.
>
> He was previously senior financial reporter, specializing in
> investigations, for The Guardian newspaper, where he worked for almost
> 20 years. Topics he has covered include generic medicine price-fixing
> cartels, the laundering of gold linked to war lords, Big Oil pledges
> on climate change and the Icelandic banking bubble.
>
> Bowers has helped exposed tax evasion and avoidance strategies that
> have cost governments billions of dollars in lost taxes. He has spent
> many years on the trail of white collar criminals.
>
> He was involved in other ICIJ projects including Luxleaks and Panama
> Papers.
>
> http://banyanproject.coop/biography/tom-stites
>
> Tom Stites
>
>   Tom is founder and president of the Banyan Project, which aims to
> strengthen democracy by pioneering a sustainable and easily replicable
> new model for Web journalism. Banyan’s mission is to help seed
> independent news co-ops in underserved communities across the nation
> and to provide them with mentorship and educational and administrative
> support so they can thrive and fulfill their mission of civic
> engagement.
>
>   Tom shaped Banyan's distinctive co-op business model as a fellow of
> the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard; he is now
> working with community leaders in Haverhill, Mass., to launch a pilot
> site. He also chairs the Banyan Project Inc. Board of Directors.
>
>   Tom is a seasoned editor and entrepreneur with a passion for
> strengthening journalism and democracy. As an editor he has supervised
> reporting that has won an array of major journalism awards including
> two Pulitzer Prizes; as an entrepreneur he has been the founding
> publisher of two print magazines and three Web publications in
> addition to Banyan. His writings and speeches on strengthening
> democracy and on journalism have won a respectful following.
>
>   Positions Tom has held include national correspondent, national
> editor, and associate managing editor for project reporting at The
> Chicago Tribune; night national editor of The New York Times, and
> managing editor of The Kansas City Times. He later served for a decade
> as the editor and publisher of UU World, the national magazine of the
> Unitarian Universalist religious denomination, then as a consulting
> editor for the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.
>
>   Tom grew up in Kansas City and attended Williams College. He has
> taught in the Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of
> Chicago and conducted seminars at several journalism schools. In 2006
> he was a Resident Fellow at Harvard Divinity School, where did
> research on power and the conscience. See Tom’s full resume. Contact
> him at tom@tomstites.com.
>
>
> Paul E. Kritzer
>
> Paul Kritzer, a lawyer in private practice, was for 24 years vice
> president, corporate secretary and general counsel of Journal
> Communications Inc. in Milwaukee, which owned The Milwaukee Journal
> Sentinel, 45 community newspapers, 9 television and 35 radio stations,
> and commercial printing, direct mail and telecommunications
> subsidiaries. His journalism career began with reporting and copy
> editing positions, and after law school and experience in Capitol Hill
> as aide to a member of Congress and assistant counsel of a House
> committee, he was editor and publisher of a 26,000-circulation daily
> newspaper in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Paul has degrees from Williams
> College, the Columbia University School of Journalism, and Georgetown
> Law School. He is secretary of the Banyan Project Inc. and a member of
> its Board of Directors.
>
> http://www.waukesha-wi.gov/164/Ethics-Board
>
> Paul E Kritzer
> 211 Oxford Rd
> Waukesha, WI 53186
> Phone:        (262) 548-9666
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
> Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2017 13:22:37 -0400
> Subject: Re My calls today about the Montreal Economic Institute
> To: ksb@stowers.org, mclean@donner.ca, tuz@chaseinv.com,
> derwood@chaseinv.com, oig <oig@sec.gov>, mgelowitz@osler.com,
> mkellygagnon@iedm.org
> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, "Bill.Morneau"
> <Bill.Morneau@canada.ca>
>
> http://business.financialpost.com/news/economy/montreal-economic-institute-continues-moves-from-the-fringe-by-appointing-joe-oliver
>
> "Although he would not disclose the individual names of any donors, tax
> returns show that MEI has received funding from the Stowers Institute
> for Medical Research, the Donner Canadian Foundation and The Chase
> Foundation of Virginia."
>
> https://www.stowers.org/media
>
> Kimberly Bland, Ph.D.
> Head, Science Communications
> 816.926.4015 - Office
> 816.392.8428 - Mobile
> ksb@stowers.org
>
> http://www.donnerfoundation.org/contact.htm
>
> Helen McLean Executive Director
> Donner Canadian Foundation
> 8 Prince Arthur Avenue, 3rd Floor
> Toronto, ON M5R 1A9
> Telephone: 416-920-6400
>
> http://www.managerreview.com/su_companydetails.php?iCompanyId=102&CompanyName=Chase%20Investment%20Counsel%20Corporation
>
> Mr.  Derwood Chase
> President/CEO
> Tel : 434-293-9104
> Email: derwood@chaseinv.com
>     
> Mr. Chase earned a BS with Distinction from the University of Virginia
> and a MBA from Harvard University. His speeches, articles and comments
> on investing and economic policy have been quoted in Barron’s,
> Business Week, The Wall Street Journal, Pensions & Investments,
> Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, and The New York Times. He has appeared
> on CNBC, The Nightly Business Report (PBS) and Bloomberg. Derwood is a
> Chartered Investment Counselor, a member of the Analysts Club
> (N.Y.C.), the New York Society of Security Analysts, and the Mont
> Pelerin Society. He is President of the Chase Foundation of Virginia,
> a Trustee of the Reason Foundation and the Fraser Institute, and a
> former Governor of the Investment Counsel Association of America.
>
> Mr.  Peter Tuz
> Researcher/Analyst
> Tel : 434-293-9104
> Email: tuz@chaseinv.com
>     
> Mr. Tuz earned his BA from Ripon College, a MA from the University of
> Missouri, and a MBA from Tulane University. Peter is a CFA charter
> holder. Before joining us in 1997 he had 10 years experience as a
> senior analyst and officer with two NYSE member firms. He serves as a
> trustee for Ripon College where he is a member of its investment
> committee. Peter is a member of CFA Virginia, CFA Society of
> Washington, D.C., the Washington Association of Money Managers and
> serves on the Investment Company Institute’s small funds committee. He
> has been an occasional guest on CNBC and The Street and serves on the
> board of CFA Virginia. He has been quoted in Barron’s, the Wall Street
> Journal, the New York Times and other publications.
>
> Chase Investment Counsel Corporation
> 350 Old Ivy Way, Suite 100
> Charlottesville, Virginia 22903-4897
> United States
>
>
>
>
>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2017 09:32:09 -0400
>> Subject: Attn Integrity Commissioner Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C.,
>> To: coi@gnb.ca
>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>
>> Good Day Sir
>>
>> After I heard you speak on CBC I called your office again and managed
>> to speak to one of your staff for the first time
>>
>> Please find attached the documents I promised to send to the lady who
>> answered the phone this morning. Please notice that not after the Sgt
>> at Arms took the documents destined to your office his pal Tanker
>> Malley barred me in writing with an "English" only document.
>>
>> These are the hearings and the dockets in Federal Court that I
>> suggested that you study closely.
>>
>> This is the docket in Federal Court
>>
>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj.gc.ca/IndexingQueries/infp_RE_info_e.php?court_no=T-1557-15&select_court=T
>>
>> These are digital recordings of  the last three hearings
>>
>> Dec 14th https://archive.org/details/BahHumbug
>>
>> January 11th, 2016 https://archive.org/details/Jan11th2015
>>
>> April 3rd, 2017
>>
>> https://archive.org/details/April32017JusticeLeblancHearing
>>
>>
>> This is the docket in the Federal Court of Appeal
>>
>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj.gc.ca/IndexingQueries/infp_RE_info_e.php?court_no=A-48-16&select_court=All
>>
>>
>> The only hearing thus far
>>
>> May 24th, 2017
>>
>> https://archive.org/details/May24thHoedown
>>
>>
>> This Judge understnds the meaning of the word Integrity
>>
>> Date: 20151223
>>
>> Docket: T-1557-15
>>
>> Fredericton, New Brunswick, December 23, 2015
>>
>> PRESENT:        The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell
>>
>> BETWEEN:
>>
>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS
>>
>> Plaintiff
>>
>> and
>>
>> HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
>>
>> Defendant
>>
>> ORDER
>>
>> (Delivered orally from the Bench in Fredericton, New Brunswick, on
>> December 14, 2015)
>>
>> The Plaintiff seeks an appeal de novo, by way of motion pursuant to
>> the Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98-106), from an Order made on November
>> 12, 2015, in which Prothonotary Morneau struck the Statement of Claim
>> in its entirety.
>>
>> At the outset of the hearing, the Plaintiff brought to my attention a
>> letter dated September 10, 2004, which he sent to me, in my then
>> capacity as Past President of the New Brunswick Branch of the Canadian
>> Bar Association, and the then President of the Branch, Kathleen Quigg,
>> (now a Justice of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal).  In that letter
>> he stated:
>>
>> As for your past President, Mr. Bell, may I suggest that you check the
>> work of Frank McKenna before I sue your entire law firm including you.
>> You are your brother’s keeper.
>>
>> Frank McKenna is the former Premier of New Brunswick and a former
>> colleague of mine at the law firm of McInnes Cooper. In addition to
>> expressing an intention to sue me, the Plaintiff refers to a number of
>> people in his Motion Record who he appears to contend may be witnesses
>> or potential parties to be added. Those individuals who are known to
>> me personally, include, but are not limited to the former Prime
>> Minister of Canada, The Right Honourable Stephen Harper; former
>> Attorney General of Canada and now a Justice of the Manitoba Court of
>> Queen’s Bench, Vic Toews; former member of Parliament Rob Moore;
>> former Director of Policing Services, the late Grant Garneau; former
>> Chief of the Fredericton Police Force, Barry McKnight; former Staff
>> Sergeant Danny Copp; my former colleagues on the New Brunswick Court
>> of Appeal, Justices Bradley V. Green and Kathleen Quigg, and, retired
>> Assistant Commissioner Wayne Lang of the Royal Canadian Mounted
>> Police.
>>
>> In the circumstances, given the threat in 2004 to sue me in my
>> personal capacity and my past and present relationship with many
>> potential witnesses and/or potential parties to the litigation, I am
>> of the view there would be a reasonable apprehension of bias should I
>> hear this motion. See Justice de Grandpré’s dissenting judgment in
>> Committee for Justice and Liberty et al v National Energy Board et al,
>> [1978] 1 SCR 369 at p 394 for the applicable test regarding
>> allegations of bias. In the circumstances, although neither party has
>> requested I recuse myself, I consider it appropriate that I do so.
>>
>>
>> AS A RESULT OF MY RECUSAL, THIS COURT ORDERS that the Administrator of
>> the Court schedule another date for the hearing of the motion.  There
>> is no order as to costs.
>>
>> “B. Richard Bell”
>> Judge
>>
>>
>> Below after the CBC article about your concerns (I made one comment
>> already) you will find the text of just two of many emails I had sent
>> to your office over the years since I first visited it in 2006.
>>
>>  I noticed that on July 30, 2009, he was appointed to the  the Court
>> Martial Appeal Court of Canada  Perhaps you should scroll to the
>> bottom of this email ASAP and read the entire Paragraph 83  of my
>> lawsuit now before the Federal Court of Canada?
>>
>> "FYI This is the text of the lawsuit that should interest Trudeau the
>> most
>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> From: justin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca
>> Date: Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 8:18 PM
>> Subject: Réponse automatique : RE My complaint against the CROWN in
>> Federal Court Attn David Hansen and Peter MacKay If you planning to
>> submit a motion for a publication ban on my complaint trust that you
>> dudes are way past too late
>> To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>
>> Veuillez noter que j'ai changé de courriel. Vous pouvez me rejoindre à
>> lalanthier@hotmail.com
>>
>> Pour rejoindre le bureau de M. Trudeau veuillez envoyer un courriel à
>> tommy.desfosses@parl.gc.ca
>>
>> Please note that I changed email address, you can reach me at
>> lalanthier@hotmail.com
>>
>> To reach the office of Mr. Trudeau please send an email to
>> tommy.desfosses@parl.gc.ca
>>
>> Thank you,
>>
>> Merci ,
>>
>>
>> http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.ca/2015/09/v-behaviorurldefaultvmlo.html
>>
>>
>> 83.  The Plaintiff states that now that Canada is involved in more war
>> in Iraq again it did not serve Canadian interests and reputation to
>> allow Barry Winters to publish the following words three times over
>> five years after he began his bragging:
>>
>> January 13, 2015
>> This Is Just AS Relevant Now As When I wrote It During The Debate
>>
>> December 8, 2014
>> Why Canada Stood Tall!
>>
>> Friday, October 3, 2014
>> Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
>> Stupid Justin Trudeau
>>
>> Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
>> behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
>>
>> When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien
>> actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign
>> in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary to
>> the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were
>> involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were
>> significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the dearth
>> of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for
>> operations after the initial occupation of Iraq. At the “last minute”
>> Prime Minister Chretien and the Liberal government changed its mind.
>> The Canadian government told our amerkan cousins that we would not
>> deploy combat troops for the Iraq campaign, but would deploy a
>> Canadian Battle Group to Afghanistan, enabling our amerkan cousins to
>> redeploy troops from there to Iraq. The PMO’s thinking that it was
>> less costly to deploy Canadian Forces to Afghanistan than Iraq. But
>> alas no one seems to remind the Liberals of Prime Minister Chretien’s
>> then grossly incorrect assumption. Notwithstanding Jean Chretien’s
>> incompetence and stupidity, the Canadian Army was heroic,
>> professional, punched well above it’s weight, and the PPCLI Battle
>> Group, is credited with “saving Afghanistan” during the Panjway
>> campaign of 2006.
>>
>> What Justin Trudeau and the Liberals don’t tell you now, is that then
>> Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien committed, and deployed the
>> Canadian army to Canada’s longest “war” without the advice, consent,
>> support, or vote of the Canadian Parliament.
>>
>> What David Amos and the rest of the ignorant, uneducated, and babbling
>> chattering classes are too addled to understand is the deployment of
>> less than 75 special operations troops, and what is known by planners
>> as a “six pac cell” of fighter aircraft is NOT the same as a
>> deployment of a Battle Group, nor a “war” make.
>>
>> The Canadian Government or The Crown unlike our amerkan cousins have
>> the “constitutional authority” to commit the Canadian nation to war.
>> That has been recently clearly articulated to the Canadian public by
>> constitutional scholar Phillippe Legasse. What Parliament can do is
>> remove “confidence” in The Crown’s Government in a “vote of
>> non-confidence.” That could not happen to the Chretien Government
>> regarding deployment to Afghanistan, and it won’t happen in this
>> instance with the conservative majority in The Commons regarding a
>> limited Canadian deployment to the Middle East.
>>
>> President George Bush was quite correct after 911 and the terror
>> attacks in New York; that the Taliban “occupied” and “failed state”
>> Afghanistan was the source of logistical support, command and control,
>> and training for the Al Quaeda war of terror against the world. The
>> initial defeat, and removal from control of Afghanistan was vital and
>>
>> P.S. Whereas this CBC article is about your opinion of the actions of
>> the latest Minister Of Health trust that Mr Boudreau and the CBC have
>> had my files for many years and the last thing they are is ethical.
>> Ask his friends Mr Murphy and the RCMP if you don't believe me.
>>
>> Subject:
>> Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 12:02:35 -0400
>> From: "Murphy, Michael B. \(DH/MS\)"MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca
>> To: motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>>
>> January 30, 2007
>>
>> WITHOUT PREJUDICE
>>
>> Mr. David Amos
>>
>> Dear Mr. Amos:
>>
>> This will acknowledge receipt of a copy of your e-mail of December 29,
>> 2006 to Corporal Warren McBeath of the RCMP.
>>
>> Because of the nature of the allegations made in your message, I have
>> taken the measure of forwarding a copy to Assistant Commissioner Steve
>> Graham of the RCMP “J” Division in Fredericton.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>> Honourable Michael B. Murphy
>> Minister of Health
>>
>> CM/cb
>>
>>
>> Warren McBeath warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca wrote:
>>
>> Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:34:53 -0500
>> From: "Warren McBeath"warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> To: kilgoursite@ca.inter.net, MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca,
>> nada.sarkis@gnb.ca, wally.stiles@gnb.ca, dwatch@web.net,
>> motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>> CC: ottawa@chuckstrahl.com, riding@chuckstrahl.com,John.Foran@gnb.ca,
>> Oda.B@parl.gc.ca,"Bev BUSSON"bev.busson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>> "Paul Dube"PAUL.DUBE@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> Subject: Re: Remember me Kilgour? Landslide Annie McLellan has
>> forgotten me but the crooks within the RCMP have not
>>
>> Dear Mr. Amos,
>>
>> Thank you for your follow up e-mail to me today. I was on days off
>> over the holidays and returned to work this evening. Rest assured I
>> was not ignoring or procrastinating to respond to your concerns.
>>
>> As your attachment sent today refers from Premier Graham, our position
>> is clear on your dead calf issue: Our forensic labs do not process
>> testing on animals in cases such as yours, they are referred to the
>> Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown who can provide these
>> services. If you do not choose to utilize their expertise in this
>> instance, then that is your decision and nothing more can be done.
>>
>> As for your other concerns regarding the US Government, false
>> imprisonment and Federal Court Dates in the US, etc... it is clear
>> that Federal authorities are aware of your concerns both in Canada
>> the US. These issues do not fall into the purvue of Detachment
>> and policing in Petitcodiac, NB.
>>
>> It was indeed an interesting and informative conversation we had on
>> December 23rd, and I wish you well in all of your future endeavors.
>>
>>  Sincerely,
>>
>> Warren McBeath, Cpl.
>> GRC Caledonia RCMP
>> Traffic Services NCO
>> Ph: (506) 387-2222
>> Fax: (506) 387-4622
>> E-mail warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>
>>
>>
>> Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C.,
>> Office of the Integrity Commissioner
>> Edgecombe House, 736 King Street
>> Fredericton, N.B. CANADA E3B 5H1
>> tel.: 506-457-7890
>> fax: 506-444-5224
>> e-mail:coi@gnb.ca
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 10:35 AM
>> Subject: RE My complaint against the CROWN in Federal Court Attn David
>> Hansen and Peter MacKay If you planning to submit a motion for a
>> publication ban on my complaint trust that you dudes are way past too
>> late
>> To: David.Hansen@justice.gc.ca, peter.mackay@justice.gc.ca
>> peacock.kurt@telegraphjournal.com, mclaughlin.heather@dailygleaner.com,
>> david.akin@sunmedia.ca, robert.frater@justice.gc.ca,
>> paul.riley@ppsc-sppc.gc.ca,
>> greg@gregdelbigio.com, joyce.dewitt-vanoosten@gov.bc.ca,
>> joan.barrett@ontario.ca, jean-vincent.lacroix@gouv.qc.ca,
>> peter.rogers@mcinnescooper.com, mfeder@mccarthy.ca, mjamal@osler.com
>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com, gopublic@cbc.ca,
>> Whistleblower@ctv.ca
>>
>> https://scc-csc.lexum.com/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/14439/index.do
>>
>> http://www.scc-csc.gc.ca/WebDocuments-DocumentsWeb/35072/FM030_Respondent_Attorney-General-of-Canada-on-Behalf-of-the-United-States-of-America.pdf
>>
>> http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2013/10/re-glen-greenwald-and-brazilian.html
>>
>> I repeat what the Hell do I do with the Yankee wiretapes taps sell
>> them on Ebay or listen to them and argue them with you dudes in
>> Feferal Court?
>>
>> Petey Baby loses all parliamentary privelges in less than a month but
>> he still supposed to be an ethical officer of the Court CORRECT?
>>
>> Veritas Vincit
>> David Raymond Amos
>> 902 800 0369
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Sat, 17 Nov 2012 14:10:14 -0400
>> Subject: Yo Mr Bauer say hey to your client Obama and his buddies in
>> the USDOJ for me will ya?
>> To: RBauer@perkinscoie.com, sshimshak@paulweiss.com,
>> cspada@lswlaw.com, msmith@svlaw.com, bginsberg@pattonboggs.com,
>> gregory.craig@skadden.com, pm@pm.gc.ca, bob.paulson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>> bob.rae@rogers.blackberry.net, MulcaT@parl.gc.caleader@greenparty.ca
>> Cc: alevine@cooley.com, david.raymond.amos@gmail.com,
>> michael.rothfeld@wsj.com, remery@ecbalaw.com
>>
>> QSLS Politics
>> By Location Visit Detail
>> Visit 29,419
>> Domain Name usdoj.gov ? (U.S. Government)
>> IP Address 149.101.1.# (US Dept of Justice)
>> ISP US Dept of Justice
>> Location Continent : North America
>> Country : United States (Facts)
>> State : District of Columbia
>> City : Washington
>> Lat/Long : 38.9097, -77.0231 (Map)
>> Language English (U.S.) en-us
>> Operating System Microsoft WinXP
>> Browser Internet Explorer 8.0
>> Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 5.1; Trident/4.0; .NET
>> CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.0.4506.2152; .NET CLR 3.5.30729; InfoPath.2;
>> DI60SP1001)
>> Javascript version 1.3
>> Monitor Resolution : 1024 x 768
>> Color Depth : 32 bits
>> Time of Visit Nov 17 2012 6:33:08 pm
>> Last Page View Nov 17 2012 6:33:08 pm
>> Visit Length 0 seconds
>> Page Views 1
>> Referring URL http://www.google.co...wwWJrm94lCEqRmovPXJg
>> Search Engine google.com
>> Search Words david amos bernie madoff
>> Visit Entry Page http://qslspolitics....-wendy-olsen-on.html
>> Visit Exit Page http://qslspolitics....-wendy-olsen-on.html
>> Out Click
>> Time Zone UTC-5:00
>> Visitor's Time Nov 17 2012 12:33:08 pm
>> Visit Number 29,419
>>
>> http://qslspolitics.blogspot.com/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html
>>
>>
>> Could ya tell I am investigating your pension plan bigtime? Its
>> because no member of the RCMP I have ever encountered has earned it yet
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2012 11:36:04 -0400
>> Subject: This is a brief as I can make my concerns Randy
>> To:  randyedmunds@gov.nl.ca
>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>
>> In a nutshell my concerns about the actions of the Investment Industry
>> affect the interests of every person in every district of every
>> country not just the USA and Canada. I was offering to help you with
>> Emera because my work with them and Danny Williams is well known and
>> some of it is over eight years old and in the PUBLIC Record.
>>
>> All you have to do is stand in the Legislature and ask the MInister of
>> Justice why I have been invited to sue Newfoundland by the
>> Conservatives
>>
>>
>> Obviously I am the guy the USDOJ and the SEC would not name who is the
>> link to Madoff and Putnam Investments
>>
>> Here is why
>>
>> http://banking.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Hearing&Hearing_ID=90f8e691-9065-4f8c-a465-72722b47e7f2
>>
>> Notice the transcripts and webcasts of the hearing of the US Senate
>> Banking Commitee are still missing? Mr Emory should at least notice
>> Eliot Spitzer and the Dates around November 20th, 2003 in the
>> following file
>>
>> http://www.checktheevidence.com/pdf/2526023-DAMOSIntegrity-yea-right.-txt.pdf
>>
>> http://occupywallst.org/users/DavidRaymondAmos/
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: "Hansen, David"David.Hansen@justice.gc.ca
>> Date: Thu, 1 Aug 2013 19:28:44 +0000
>> Subject: RE: I just called again Mr Hansen
>> To: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>
>> Hello Mr. Amos,
>>
>> I manage the Justice Canada civil litigation section in the Atlantic
>> region.  We are only responsible for litigating existing civil
>> litigation files in which the Attorney General of Canada is a named
>> defendant or plaintiff.  If you are a plaintiff or defendant in an
>> existing civil litigation matter in the Atlantic region in which
>> Attorney General of Canada is a named defendant or plaintiff please
>> provide the court file number, the names of the parties in the action
>> and your question.  I am not the appropriate contact for other
>> matters.
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> David A. Hansen
>> Regional Director | Directeur régional
>> General Counsel |Avocat général
>> Civil Litigation and Advisory | Contentieux des affaires civiles et
>> services de consultation
>> Department of Justice | Ministère de la Justice
>> Suite 1400 – Duke Tower | Pièce 1400 – Tour Duke
>> 5251 Duke Street | 5251 rue Duke
>> Halifax, Nova Scotia | Halifax, Nouvelle- Écosse
>> B3J 1P3
>> david.hansen@justice.gc.ca
>> Telephone | Téléphone (902) 426-3261 / Facsimile | Télécopieur (902)
>> 426-2329
>> This e-mail is confidential and may be protected by solicitor-client
>> privilege. Unauthorized distribution or disclosure is prohibited. If
>> you have received this e-mail in error, please notify us and delete
>> this entire e-mail.
>> Before printing think about the Environment
>> Thinking Green, please do not print this e-mail unless necessary.
>> Pensez vert, svp imprimez que si nécessaire.
>>
>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>> Date: Sat, 15 Jun 2013 02:23:24 -0300
>>> Subject: ATTN FBI Special Agent Richard Deslauriers Have you talked to
>>> your buddies Fred Wyshak and Brian Kelly about the wiretap tapes YET?
>>> To: boston@ic.fbi.gov, washington.field@ic.fbi.gov,
>>> bob.paulson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>> Brian.Kelly@usdoj.gov, us.marshals@usdoj.gov, Fred.Wyshak@usdoj.gov,
>>> jcarney@carneybassil.com, bbachrach@bachrachlaw.net
>>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com, birgittaj@althingi.is,
>>> shmurphy@globe.com, redicecreations@gmail.com
>>>
>>> FBI Boston
>>> One Center Plaza
>>> Suite 600
>>> Boston, MA 02108
>>> Phone: (617) 742-5533
>>> Fax: (617) 223-6327
>>> E-mail: Boston@ic.fbi.gov
>>>
>>> Hours
>>> Although we operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, our normal
>>> "walk-in" business hours are from 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday
>>> through Friday. If you need to speak with a FBI representative at any
>>> time other than during normal business hours, please telephone our
>>> office at (617) 742-5533.
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>> Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2013 01:20:20 -0300
>>> Subject: Yo Fred Wyshak and Brian Kelly your buddy Whitey's trial is
>>> finally underway now correct? What the hell do I do with the wiretap
>>> tapes Sell them on Ebay?
>>> To: Brian.Kelly@usdoj.gov, us.marshals@usdoj.gov,
>>> Fred.Wyshak@usdoj.gov, jcarney@carneybassil.com,
>>> bbachrach@bachrachlaw.net, wolfheartlodge@live.com, shmurphy@globe.com,
>>> >> jonathan.albano@bingham.commvalencia@globe.com
>>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
>>> PATRICK.MURPHY@dhs.gov, rounappletree@aol.com
>>>
>>> http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/06/05/james-whitey-bulger-jury-selection-process-enters-second-day/KjS80ofyMMM5IkByK74bkK/story.html
>>>
>>> http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2013/06/09/nsa-leak-guardian.html
>>>
>>> As the CBC etc yap about Yankee wiretaps and whistleblowers I must ask
>>> them the obvious question AIN'T THEY FORGETTING SOMETHING????
>>>
>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vugUalUO8YY
>>>
>>> What the hell does the media think my Yankee lawyer served upon the
>>> USDOJ right after I ran for and seat in the 39th Parliament baseball
>>> cards?
>>>
>>> http://www.archive.org/details/FedsUsTreasuryDeptRcmpEtc
>>>
>>> http://archive.org/details/ITriedToExplainItToAllMaritimersInEarly2006
>>>
>>> http://davidamos.blogspot.ca/2006/05/wiretap-tapes-impeach-bush.html
>>>
>>> http://www.archive.org/details/PoliceSurveilanceWiretapTape139
>>>
>>> http://archive.org/details/Part1WiretapTape143
>>>
>>> FEDERAL EXPRES February 7, 2006
>>> Senator Arlen Specter
>>> United States Senate
>>> Committee on the Judiciary
>>> 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building
>>> Washington, DC 20510
>>>
>>> Dear Mr. Specter:
>>>
>>> I have been asked to forward the enclosed tapes to you from a man
>>> named, David Amos, a Canadian citizen, in connection with the matters
>>> raised in the attached letter.
>>>
>>> Mr. Amos has represented to me that these are illegal FBI wire tap
>>> tapes.
>>>
>>> I believe Mr. Amos has been in contact with you about this previously.
>>>
>>> Very truly yours,
>>> Barry A. Bachrach
>>> Direct telephone: (508) 926-3403
>>> Direct facsimile: (508) 929-3003
>>> Email: bbachrach@bowditch.com
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "David Amos"david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>> To: "Rob Talach"rtalach@ledroitbeckett.com
>>> Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2012 10:59 PM
>>> Subject: Re: Attn Robert Talach and I should talk ASAP about my suing
>>> the Catholic Church Trust that Bastarache knows why
>>>
>>> The date stamp on about page 134 of this old file of mine should mean
>>> a lot to you
>>>
>>> http://www.checktheevidence.com/pdf/2619437-CROSS-BORDER-txt-.pdf
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>> Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 15:37:08 -0400
>>> Subject: To Hell with the KILLER COP Gilles Moreau What say you NOW
>>> Bernadine Chapman??
>>> To: Gilles.Moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, phil.giles@statcan.ca,
>>> maritme_malaise@yahoo.ca, Jennifer.Nixon@ps-sp.gc.ca,
>>> bartman.heidi@psic-ispc.gc.ca, Yves.J.Marineau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>> david.paradiso@erc-cee.gc.ca, desaulniea@smtp.gc.ca,
>>> denise.brennan@tbs-sct.gc.ca, anne.murtha@vac-acc.gc.ca,
>>> webo@xplornet.com, julie.dickson@osfi-bsif.gc.ca,
>>> rod.giles@osfi-bsif.gc.ca, flaherty.j@parl.gc.ca, toewsv1@parl.gc.ca,
>>> Nycole.Turmel@parl.gc.ca,Clemet1@parl.gc.ca, maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca,
>>> >> oig@sec.gov, whistleblower@finra.org, whistle@fsa.gov.uk,
>>> david@fairwhistleblower.ca
>>> Cc: j.kroes@interpol.int, david.raymond.amos@gmail.com,
>>> bernadine.chapman@rcmp-grc.gc.cajustin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca,
>>> Juanita.Peddle@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
>>> Wayne.Lang@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, Robert.Trevors@gnb.ca,
>>> ian.fahie@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
>>>
>>> http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/nb/news-nouvelles/media-medias-eng.htm
>>>
>>> http://nb.rcmpvet.ca/Newsletters/VetsReview/nlnov06.pdf
>>>
>>> From: Gilles Moreau Gilles.Moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>> Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 08:03:22 -0500
>>> Subject: Re: Lets ee if the really nasty Newfy Lawyer Danny Boy
>>> Millions will explain this email to you or your boss Vic Toews EH
>>> Constable Peddle???
>>> To: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>>
>>> Please cease and desist from using my name in your emails.
>>>
>>> Gilles Moreau, Chief Superintendent, CHRP and ACC
>>> Director General
>>> HR Transformation
>>> 73 Leikin Drive, M5-2-502
>>> Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R2
>>>
>>> Tel 613-843-6039
>>> Cel 613-818-6947
>>>
>>> Gilles Moreau, surintendant principal, CRHA et ACC
>>> Directeur général de la Transformation des ressources humaines
>>> 73 Leikin, pièce M5-2-502
>>> Ottawa, ON K1A 0R2
>>>
>>> tél 613-843-6039
>>> cel 613-818-6947
>>> gilles.moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>>
>

YO Paul Palango Go Figure why I introduced you to Emily Bell and Philip Lee after your beloved Frank News Rag died

David Amos

<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 8:45 PM
To: newsroom@bramptonguardian.com, ColinRichdale@gmail.com, Matt.Jeneroux@parl.gc.ca, votefortonymoracci@gmail.com, vsgautam@hotmail.com, nikki@nikkikaur.ca, bob@brampton.ca, chad.rogers@crestviewstrategy.com, tpowers@summa.ca, slevitz@torstar.ca, andrew <andrew@frankmagazine.ca>, charest@mccarthy.ca, patrick.brown@brampton.ca, "pierre.poilievre"<pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, "leslyn.lewis"<leslyn.lewis@parl.gc.ca>, Scott.Aitchison@parl.gc.ca, "Marco.Mendicino"<Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, "Mark.Blakely"<Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Kevin.leahy"<Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "ian.fahie"<ian.fahie@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, ebell@columbia.edu, sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.ca, Catherine.Tait@cbc.ca, martine.turcotte@bell.ca, pablo.rodriguez@parl.gc.ca, Melanie.Joly@parl.gc.ca, plee@stu.ca, Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca, darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Robert. Jones"<Robert.Jones@cbc.ca>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, NightTimePodcast <NightTimePodcast@gmail.com>, nsinvestigators <nsinvestigators@gmail.com>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, paulpalango <paulpalango@protonmail.com>


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/09/what-isnt-wrong-with-journalism-today.html

Friday, 27 September 2019

'What isn't wrong with journalism today?' asks Dalton Camp lecturer

https://stephenkimber.com/no-offence-intended-mr-rudderham/
No offence intended, Mr. Rudderham

One shouldn’t mess — litigiously speaking — with Parker Rudderham. The
Cape Breton businessman who owns Frank Magazine  — a publication with
its own storied courtroom history — sometimes seems as (in)famous for
his legal battles as his business successes and philanthropic
donations.

On October 30, 2012, to cite but one recent example, his hometown
newspaper, the Cape Breton Post, scored a two-for-one story that
began: “A prominent Cape Breton businessman’s company pleaded guilty
to tax evasion Tuesday, the same day he was issued a ticket for his
involvement in a fatal motor-vehicle accident.”

The Canada Revenue Agency claimed Rudderham’s Montreal-based
Professional Pharmacy Wholesale Service had “voluntarily violated” tax
laws by claiming over $1 million in false expenses. Rudderham pleaded
guilty in court but not guilty in the court of public opinion,
stressing to a reporter he’d have fought the accusation if he hadn’t
been in the middle of selling the company.

Although Rudderham was tight-lipped that day about the motorcycle
accident — he had been fined $399.91 under the Motor Vehicle Act for
failing to drive in a “careful and prudent manner” — he later
announced he’d fight the charge. The widow of the motorcyclist then
filed suit against him.

And so it goes. Without pretending to be exhaustive, some cases from
Rudderham’s docket: In 2003, he was sued by his ex-employer for
allegedly violating his employment contract. In 2007, he sued “an
ex-wife’s family member for defamation.” In 2011, he threatened to sue
the Halifax Herald over its coverage of firings at Frank. In 2013,
Frank reported Rudderham sued his second cousin over a $27,000 debt.

All of which by way of saying it is with some trepidation one
questions Parker Rudderham.

Still, I was intrigued by his latest legal to-and-fro. Rudderham is
suing a Cape Breton woman and son for alleged “cyberbullying” tweets
about him. The defendants dispute that and counter the province’s
Cyber Safety Act violates Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

It’s not the first time a prominent, well-connected individual has
invoked our new cyberbullying law against those they claim have
criticized them. Is that really who the law was intended to protect?
Will the law — and its good intentions — survive a Charter challenge?

No offence intended, Mr. Rudderham.

STEPHEN KIMBER, a Professor of Journalism at the University of King's
College in Halifax and co-founder of its MFA in Creative Nonfiction
Program

https://ukings.ca/people/stephen-kimber/

Stephen Kimber

stephen.kimber@ukings.ca

902 422-1271 ext. 150



https://www.saltwire.com/prince-edward-island/news/widow-of-motorcyclist-killed-in-accident-suing-frank-magazine-owner-105567/


Widow of motorcyclist killed in accident suing Frank Magazine owner

Posted: Sept. 16, 2013, midnight

SYDNEY, N.S. — The widow of a Nova Scotia man killed while attempting
to turn his motorcycle onto his street has filed a civil suit against
the driver of the vehicle that struck the bike.

In a statement of claim filed with the Supreme Court this week, Carol
MacDonald is seeking unspecified damages from Sydney businessman
Parker Rudderham, CEO and president of Montreal-based Professional
Pharmacy Wholesale Services Ltd. and owner of the Halifax-based Frank
Magazine.

Rudderham was already charged under the Motor Vehicle Act with failing
to drive in a careful and prudent manner and paid a fine of $399.91.

The suit outlines several allegations, including Rudderham failed to
drive in a prudent manner, failed to maintain a proper lookout and
failed to take proper defensive driving techniques in a bid to avoid
an accident.

None of the information outlined in the statement of claim has been
proven in court.

The accident occurred Sept. 14, 2012, as 67-year-old John MacLeod
MacDonald was attempting to turn his motorcycle off Grand Lake Road
onto Kytes Hill Drive.

In attempting to make the turn, MacDonald was struck from behind by a
2012 Cadillac Escalade driven by Rudderham.

A defence response to the action needs to be filed within 15 days.


https://www.saltwire.com/atlantic-canada/news/cape-bretoners-react-to-frank-magazine-closure-100773889/


Cape Bretoners react to Frank Magazine closure
Christopher Connors | Posted: a day ago


Gerry Rendell, owner of John's Barber Shop, prepares to cut the hair
of longtime customer Jody Merriam. For decades, copies of Frank
Magazine were strewn on a table in the lobby of the iconic Sydney
River shop. The self-described collection of “news, satire, opinion,
comment, and humour,” shut down Wednesday after 35 years. Chris
Connors/Cape Breton Post
Gerry Rendell, owner of John's Barber Shop, prepares to cut the hair
of longtime customer Jody Merriam. For decades, copies of Frank
Magazine were strewn on a table in the lobby of the iconic Sydney
River shop. The self-described collection of “news, satire, opinion,
comment, and humour,” shut down Wednesday after 35 years. Chris
Connors/Cape Breton Post


SYDNEY RIVER, N.S. — John's Barber Shop has been a Sydney River
institution for more than 50 years.

And along with the décor — walls covered with Toronto Maple Leafs
memorabilia photos and newspaper clippings featuring local people and
their accomplishments — there was one other constant: a round wooden
table covered with dozens of copies of Frank Magazine.

Jody Merriam, who was waiting for a haircut Thursday, was suspired to
hear the Halifax publication known for its brash reporting of
political scandals and regional gossip was shutting down after 35
years.

Merriam said he always leafed through the magazine while waiting for
his turn in the barber’s chair.

“It was for the humour and the gossip that they provided,” he said.
“It’s just human nature — the cover shows all these people that you
know and you see on the news — people across Nova Scotia that are high
up — and they’re printing stuff in this magazine that is detrimental
to them probably, to their character and everything like that. It
didn’t matter what stature you held, your dirty laundry was aired out
in this magazine.”
Frank Magazine Atlantic has closed. - submitted
NOT A FAN

Gerry Rendell took over John's Barber Shop after his father, John
Rendell, died in 2021. By that time, the COVID-19 pandemic had forced
them to remove their magazines and they still mainly operate by
appointment so people aren’t lingering in the lobby.

While his father enjoyed the magazine, Gerry said he was never a fan.

“Dad had his own thoughts on it — he thought it was entertaining, it
kept you in touch with what was going on behind the scenes here. I
didn’t really agree with it because they focused on the negative and
I’m an optimistic person,” he said, adding that they always removed
any copies that criticized their customers.

“I read the stories too but anytime we had somebody who was in here
and a story was based on them, we would take that magazine out of
respect,” he said.

“It happened with clientele who came in — obviously I’m not going to
mention any names — but you didn’t want people talking about these
people when they came in; we’re not a place of gossip here, it’s a
place to get a haircut and what’s said here stays here.”
OWNED BY CAPE BRETONER

Self-described as a collection of “news, satire, opinion, comment, and
humour,” Frank was established in 1987 and had been owned by prominent
Cape Breton businessman Parker Rudderham since 2010. Rudderham did not
respond to a request for an interview as of press time.

Paul Palango, a former Globe and Mail editor who has been writing for
Frank in recent years, told SaltWire Media on Wednesday that he
believes Frank’s closure was a result of Colchester County politicians
lobbying to have the publication banned from some local stores as a
result of its coverage of the 2020 mass killings.

- Chris Connors is a multimedia journalist with the Cape Breton Post.





https://www.nsbuzz.ca/life/frank-magazine-says-goodbye-after-35-years/



 Nova Scotia Buzz



Frank Magazine Says Goodbye After 35 Years
Frank Magazine Says Goodbye After 35 Years

by  Nova Scotia Buzz

Posted September 14, 2022



The Halifax edition of Frank Magazine has shuttered its social media
accounts and posted a message on their website.

“We regret to announce the death of Frank Magazine, 35, which occurred
on September 14, 2022.” the Magazine said.

Frank began publishing in 1987 and was well known for printing
political scandals and regional gossip.

More recently, the magazine has been known for its reporting on the
Nova Scotia mass shooting. It obtained and was the first to release
security video of the shooter being shot by RCMP at the Irving Big
Stop in Enfield. The Magazine also appealed a decision by the Mass
Casualty Commission to not release the security videos of the shooters
death publicly. They were backed by several other media outlets and
won the appeal.

The magazine said subscribers can claim the balance owing on their
subscription by calling 1-877-633-9595.

 buzz@nsbuzz.ca

https://www.saltwire.com/nova-scotia/news/frank-magazine-goes-belly-up-100773020/


Frank Magazine goes belly up
Chris Lambie |clambie@herald.ca
Posted September 14, 2022


Frank Magazine Atlantic has closed.
Frank Magazine Atlantic published this image in announcing it has closed.

Stuffed shirts and political hacks, breathe easy.

Halifax-based Frank Magazine which billed itself as a collection “of
news, satire, opinion, comment, and humour,” has shut down.

“We regret to announce the death of Frank Magazine Atlantic, 35, which
occurred on September 14, 2022,” says a note on the publication’s
website.

“Stricken with a rogue’s gallery of grievous and irremediable medical
conditions, death was quick and (mostly! - ed.) painless.”
'It’s been going on for a number of weeks'

Managing editor Andrew Douglas could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

“Stricken with a rogue’s gallery of grievous and irremediable medical
conditions, death was quick and (mostly! - ed.) painless.”
'It’s been going on for a number of weeks'

Managing editor Andrew Douglas could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

“I didn’t know it was that precarious a situation,” he said.
'It is a big loss'

The closure is a loss for Nova Scotia, Palango said.

“Frank was a part of the journalistic ecosystem here and it is a big
loss,” he said.

“They reported on stories that weren’t on the agenda, basically. They
were out scouting for stories that should be reported and that weren’t
reported. Stories that were on the edge.”
Politicians blamed

Palango, who reported extensively on the Nova Scotia mass murders of
April 2020 for Frank, credited Douglas for his journalistic chops.

He blamed the Frank closure on Colchester County politicians who
banded together to get Frank banned from some local stores last year
over their coverage of Dartmouth denturist Gabriel Wortman’s murders
of 22 people and the horrific aftermath.  “I want to congratulate
them,” Palango said. “They’re very successful because they killed
Frank and I hope they’re happy.”



https://surge105.ca/2022/09/15/after-35-years-frank-magazine-says-goodbye-to-halifax/


After 35 Years, Frank Magazine Says Goodbye To Halifax
By Amy Chabot
Sep 15, 2022


Love them or hate them, for 35 years Frank magazine has been breaking
stories in Halifax.

Frank started in 1987 and was well known for printing political
scandals and regional gossip. So much gossip!!!!

As of yesterday, Frank is no more!

“We regret to announce the death of Frank Magazine, 35, which occurred
on September 14, 2022.” the Magazine said.

David T.S. Fraser
@privacylawyer
Didn't expect this ... Frank Magazine Atlantic (@Frank_Mag) is shutting down.
Sreencap of the following announcement: "We regret to announce the
death of Frank Magazine Atlantic, 35, which occurred on September 14,
2022. Stricken with a rogues' gallery of grievous and irremediable
medical conditions, death was quick and (mostly! - ed) painless."

who knows?
@slg2021
I think @Frank_Mag is done

Image

In the last couple of years they reported on  Nova Scotia mass
shooting. It obtained and was the first to release security video of
the shooter being shot by RCMP at the Irving Big Stop in Enfield. The
Magazine also appealed a decision by the Mass Casualty Commission to
not release the security videos of the shooters death publicly. They
were backed by several other media outlets and won the appeal.

https://www.frankmagazine.org/

The magazine said subscribers can claim the balance owing on their
subscription by calling 1-877-633-9595.



https://www.halifaxexaminer.ca/featured/the-vile-racism-and-misogyny-that-was-frank-magazine/


The vile racism and misogyny that was Frank Magazine
Morning File, Thursday, September 15, 2022

September 15, 2022 By Tim Bousquet 6 Comments
News

1. Frank

Frank Magazine announcing its own death

Frank Magazine has died.

The magazine announced its own death on its website, and then deleted
its social media accounts. No explanation was provided for the
closure.

Frank was started in 1987 by David Bentley, Lyndon Watkins, and Dulcie
Conrad. Bentley was the primary operator of Frank, having used the
proceeds of his sale of The Daily News to finance the new magazine.
(There’s a publication with the same name in Ottawa; the two are not
now related.)

Bentley infused Frank with the spirit of the English tabloids. Frank
scoured assessment and court records to satirically take on the
business and political elites, and otherwise reported on their private
lives. This was in stark contrast to the existing news media, which
were timid and overly deferential to the powerful.

There’s a complicated ownership history, but in 2004, Frank was
purchased by John Williams. Williams was especially good at revealing
the sex abuse scandals of the Catholic Church. His work was important,
and I valued the publication.

I was friendly with Williams. It was clear the enterprise was
exhausting him, and he complained that it wasn’t working financially.
So I wasn’t surprised in 2010 when he sold it. I congratulated him on
his work, and wished him the best. Williams then made a run at a gay
publication called Gaze*, but subsequently left journalism completely.
I haven’t kept up with him, but I’m told he’s doing well. I’m glad.

While I wasn’t surprised that Williams sold Frank, I was surprised
about who bought it: Parker Rudderham, the Cape Breton businessman
with a reputation for his many engagements in the court system.

Soon after Rudderham bought Frank there was a mass exodus and/or
firing (depending on whom you talk to) at Frank. My understanding is
that staff were upset at the increasingly misogynistic turn of Frank.
Four reporters left: Mairin Prentiss, Jacob Boon, Neal Ozano, and Dan
Walsh, leaving editorial control of the magazine in the hands of the
sole remaining reporter, Andrew Douglas. Rudderham reportedly
threatened to sue the Chronicle Herald over its reporting on the staff
issues.

In the wake of that episode, the little publication that had been
punching up for the previous 14 years began aggressively punching
down, attacking unions, women, immigrants, and (especially) people of
colour.

Much of that ugly “reporting” was directed at my friend and colleague, El Jones.

“They drew me as a monkey,” Jones tells me, referring to a cartoon
published in the magazine, which was reminiscent of 19th century
cartoons representing Black people as beasts. Publication of the
cartoon resulted in Frank being yanked completely from the stands at
Atlantic News and pulled off prominent display in other outlets.

“Frank spent years following me around in public, taking pictures of
me walking on the street, reposting private posts from my social media
and making fake identities to come on my page, turning up at award
events to harass and post about me and nobody else, and on and on and
on,” continues Jones. “What great political project was involved in
Andrew Douglas walking by Venus Envy and tweeting about how he saw a
book on interracial sex, adding, ‘don’t tell El Jones’?”

“I also note that the very thing they are now being credited with —
fierce criticism of the RCMP — is the very thing they harassed me
over,” she adds. “When Black and Indigenous women said and say the
police are corrupt and not accountable, Frank put us on the cover and
degraded us. And the very next week, they could write about the
police, and get praised. This is a great example of how racism and
misogynoir work — I am ‘crazy,’ a ‘cop hater’ and ‘disgusting’ when I
make informed critique of the police, but when white men critique the
police, they are fantastic journalists.”

It wasn’t just Jones that Frank attacked. I won’t get into all the
details of its coverage of Rehtaeh Parsons, but will note that Douglas
decided the real guilty party was not the boys who assaulted Rehtaeh,
but rather her mother, Leah Parsons, for improper parental
supervision. “My mother wouldn’t have given me the chance to kill
myself,” wrote Douglas. “She would’ve done it for me.”

Then there was this February 25, 2016 tweet from @Frank_Mag (the
entire account was deleted yesterday), after Halifax Transit named one
of the ferries in honour of civil rights activist Viola Desmond:

    Next year during Black History Month, we’ll all be able to ride
Viola Desmond. Several times a day, if that’s what you’re in to.

I’m just scratching the surface. The magazine was filled with such
vile shit issue after issue.

But it turns out that being overtly and proudly sexist and racist is a
rotten business model — why pay for that shit when you can get it for
free from your asshole uncle on Facebook?

I have no knowledge of the finances of Frank, but under Douglas’s
reign, the publication increasingly felt like a vanity project for
Rudderham. I don’t know how much money he lost on Frank, but evidently
he has recently decided that it was too much of a money hole, so he
pulled the plug.

About that RCMP reporting. I won’t air dirty laundry in public. My
relationship with writers — why I publish them, why I sometimes decide
to stop publishing them — is not the public’s business. Suffice it to
say that as an editor I have many concerns — reputational value,
reliable sourcing, accuracy, how issues are framed, the potential for
litigation, and more — and I have not just the right but the
responsibility as editor to exercise my judgment on these things.

I reported critically on the RCMP long before the mass murders of
April 2020 — as I detailed in the Dead Wrong series, the RCMP
knowingly left Glen Assoun, an innocent man, in prison rather than let
an investigator cast doubt on Assoun’s conviction — and I’ve been
reporting critically on the RCMP in relation to the mass murders. But
I do so fairly,  accurately, and with facts I find properly sourced.

Competition in the news business is good, as it sharpens all of us,
keeps us on our toes. I criticize other publications, but when they
close or downsize, I usually lament the loss, praise the past
reporting, and worry for the reporters’ futures.

Not this time. Not after what was done to my friend. Not after the
mean-spirited attacks on women and victims of sexual abuse. Not after
the proudly racist commentary.

Frank and its vile writers can rot in hell.


Nova Scotia’s Frank magazine, a mix of news, satire and humour, ceases
publication

By The Staff The Canadian Press michael.macdonald@thecanadianpress.com
Posted September 15, 2022 11:05 am

Andrew Douglas, managing editor of Frank Magazine, arrives at
provincial court in Halifax on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2016. The
Halifax-based satirical magazine Frank has announced its demise after
more than three decades of publication.(THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew
Vaughan) Andrew Douglas, managing editor of Frank Magazine, arrives at
provincial court in Halifax on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2016. The
Halifax-based satirical magazine Frank has announced its demise after
more than three decades of publication.(THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew
Vaughan)

The Halifax-based satirical magazine Frank has announced its demise
after more than three decades of publication.

A notice on the publication’s website says the publishers “regret to
announce the death of Frank Magazine Atlantic … which occurred on
September 14, 2022.”

A photo montage depicting the cartoon figure who appeared on the
magazine’s masthead, lying in a coffin with his eyes closed,
accompanies the announcement.

The website says the publication, which is distinct from the
Ottawa-based magazine of the same name, had operated for 35 years.

It was widely sold at supermarket checkouts and was available online
for a subscription fee, and the announcement says subscribers will be
reimbursed.

The editor of the publication, Andrew Douglas, was not immediately
available for comment.
A photo depicting the cartoon figure who appeared on the magazine’s
masthead lying in a coffin accompanied the announcement of the
magazine ceasing publication.
A photo depicting the cartoon figure who appeared on the magazine’s
masthead lying in a coffin accompanied the announcement of the
magazine ceasing publication. Frank Magazine

The magazine has received praise and criticism over the years for its
journalism, with some commentators noting that in the past it would
break stories that other media then followed.

Stephen Kimber, a faculty member at the University of King’s College
school of journalism, writing and publishing in Halifax, said he used
to frequently purchase the magazine, regarding it as something of “a
guilty pleasure.”

“It had a heyday when they were satirical, they were nasty, and they
would uncover things people didn’t want uncovered, but they had a
focus on politicians, businessmen and media stars,” he said in an
interview on Thursday.

“There was a period when they were breaking stories,” he recalled,
referring primarily to the 1990s.

“They did some of the first stories about (former premier) Gerald
Regan’s issues with women, they did stories about (former premier)
John Buchanan’s trust funds. They were an important journalistic
publication in this province for a period of time.”

More recently, the publication was the first to publish a story
revealing that senior members of an internal RCMP team tasked with
providing information to Nova Scotia’s mass shooting inquiry were
married to two top female officers involved in the response. The two
Mounties on the team were subsequently replaced due to conflict of
interest concerns.

However, Kimber said in recent years he felt the emphasis often
shifted too far away from knocking the powerful off their pedestals.

“Many of those being exposed were ordinary people who had nothing to
say in terms of public policy or business or anything else,” he said.

“I stopped making it a regular thing to buy.”

In 2017, the magazine came under criticism for a cartoon that depicted
El Jones, an African Nova Scotian poet who was attending a
demonstration, as having a jutting chin and sloping forehead.

The magazine modified the image after critics described the image as
racist and launched campaigns to remove the magazine from stores.
Douglas also apologized to readers, saying, “In our mind, we didn’t
use (a) racist character, but having said that we also understand that
can be totally subjective.”

Jones, who is now the Nancy’s chair in women’s studies at Mount Saint
Vincent University, said in an interview at the time she viewed the
image as a throwback to racist images in magazines in the 1800s that
depicted African men and women as having features closer to primates
than Caucasians.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 15, 2022.


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/nova-scotia-frank-magazine-ceases-publication-1.6585708

Nova Scotia's Frank magazine ceases publication
The publication had operated for 35 years
Michael Tutton · The Canadian Press · Posted: Sep 16, 2022 3:28 PM AT


The Halifax-based satirical magazine Frank has announced its demise
after more than three decades of publication. A notice on the
publication's website says the publishers "regret to announce the
death of Frank Magazine Atlantic ... which occurred on September 14,
2022." (www.frankmagazine.ca)

The Halifax-based satirical magazine Frank has announced its demise
after more than three decades of publication.

A notice on the publication's website says the publishers "regret to
announce the death of Frank Magazine Atlantic ... which occurred on
September 14, 2022."

A photo montage depicting the cartoon figure who appeared on the
magazine's masthead, lying in a coffin with his eyes closed,
accompanies the announcement.

The website says the publication, which is distinct from the
Ottawa-based magazine of the same name, had operated for 35 years.

It was widely sold at supermarket checkouts and was available online
for a subscription fee, and the announcement says subscribers will be
reimbursed.

    Media law experts say decision to publish 911 calls not a matter
for investigation

The editor of the publication, Andrew Douglas, was not immediately
available for comment.
Praise and criticism over the years

The magazine has received praise and criticism over the years for its
journalism, with some commentators noting that in the past it would
break stories that other media then followed.

Stephen Kimber, a faculty member at the University of King's College
school of journalism, writing and publishing in Halifax, said he used
to frequently purchase the magazine, regarding it as something of "a
guilty pleasure."

"It had a heyday when they were satirical, they were nasty, and they
would uncover things people didn't want uncovered, but they had a
focus on politicians, businessmen and media stars," he said in an
interview on Thursday.

"There was a period when they were breaking stories," he recalled,
referring primarily to the 1990s.

    Frank Magazine pleads not guilty to breaching publication ban

"They did some of the first stories about [former premier] Gerald
Regan's issues with women, they did stories about [former premier]
John Buchanan's trust funds. They were an important journalistic
publication in this province for a period of time."

More recently, Frank was the first to publish a story revealing that
senior members of an internal RCMP team tasked with providing
information to Nova Scotia's mass shooting inquiry were married to two
top female officers involved in the response. The two Mounties on the
team were subsequently replaced due to concerns about conflict of
interest.

Andrew Douglas, the editor of the publication, was not immediately
available for comment. (CBC)

However, Kimber said in recent years he felt the emphasis often
shifted too far away from knocking the powerful off their pedestals.

"Many of those being exposed were ordinary people who had nothing to
say in terms of public policy or business or anything else," he said.

"I stopped making it a regular thing to buy."

In 2017, the magazine came under criticism for a cartoon that depicted
El Jones, an African Nova Scotian poet who was attending a
demonstration, as having a jutting chin and sloping forehead.

The magazine modified the image after critics described the image as
racist and launched campaigns to remove the magazine from stores.

Douglas also apologized to readers, saying, "In our mind, we didn't
use [a] racist character, but having said that we also understand that
can be totally subjective."

Jones, who is now the Nancy's chair in women's studies at Mount Saint
Vincent University, said in an interview at the time she viewed the
image as a throwback to racist images in magazines in the 1800s that
depicted African men and women as having features closer to primates
than Caucasians.
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPdhseV1AiQ&ab_channel=AdamRodgers



MCC Day 70 - Police Oversight Advice and the Untimely Death of Frank Magazine
200 views
Sep 14, 2022
Adam Rodgers
728 subscribers
The Mass Casualty Commission held its final research and policy
roundtable today. This one was focused on civilian oversight advice
for the Commissioners, and featured 19 speakers, in addition to the
moderator.

The biggest news of the day may have been the sudden announcement that
Frank Magazine was not going to be publishing any more issues. Frank
has been a unique and important source of investigative reporting on
the MCC over the past two years, and on all things Nova Scotia for 35
years. There will be a large void to fill.

The MCC learned today that much of the current civilian oversight of
the RCMP is quite limited in its ability to hold the force to account,
and very little of that oversight is local to Nova Scotia. There will
be an afternoon session tomorrow, featuring a presentation from the
Avalon Sexual Assault Centre and input from other "justice related"
organizations. There are four days of proceedings on the calendar for
next week, though there are no details available as to what will be
taking place during those sessions.

14 Comments

David Amos
David Amos
Why act so surprised? I suspect that you or at least some of your fans
must have watched your buddies Palango and Bonaparte in YouTube on
Sunday night Correct? Methinks it was blatantly obvious the glass
pumpkin was revealing to Palango and his pal that Rudderham was about
to give Andy Baby the boot N'esy Pas?


Jean Mac Aulay
Jean Mac Aulay
Thank you for the summaries! I have enjoyed hearing your views on the
MCC. Sorry for the death of Frank's Magazine.
David Amos
David Amos
"Thank you for the summaries!" Ditto "I have enjoyed hearing your
views on the MCC." Me Too "Sorry for the death of Frank's Magazine."
Nay Not I




ck
ck
As always great insight. After all that has been brought to the table
for RCMP the only way to fix the process is start at the top and work
down. They seem to have been allowed over time to do things their way
and DON'T QUESTION OUR STRUCTURE.......
David Amos
David Amos
Methinks many agree that we should defund the Crown Corps commonly
known as the RCMP and CBC ASAP N'esy Pas?



NS citizen
NS citizen
Frank magazine did some good work to be sure, I wrote an essay in
defense of Frank months back, but Andrew Douglas allowed his political
biases to alienate his own audience. He doxxed a bunch of people who
donated to a protest in defense of charter rights that were under
attack (attacks no one could reasonably justify in a free and
democratic society because they weren't based on evidence or sound
reasoning) he hyper focused on Jeremy McKenzie as what seemed like
dozens of people made public claims they'd cancel subscriptions over
those two things alone, refused to cover the attack on Salman Rushdie
by an Islamic extremist, refused to cover the Kamloops hoax where
there was no bodies discovered, refused to cover laif Marouf being
paid by government to spread hate and evil, and meanwhile he was
bemoaning Pierre povilierre, Jordan Peterson and basically tried to
cultivate some kind of elitist illiberal partisans who apparently
weren't willing to pay for a subscription. It's a shame to see someone
self sabotage a magazine so bad but in my view he became an enemy of
free speech pushing a silence of tyranny, tried to portray a lot of
speech outside of the coercive conformity of the epistemic tribalism
of the left, as violence. It's a good lesson for him. Good opportunity
to be less of a censorious joke in the future. Portray words as
violence and the people will repudiate you as harmful trash and an
attack on our democracy based on pluralism. He can take the lesson
that the onus on tolerance in democratic pluralisms IS ON THE
LISTENER.
David Amos
David Amos
Well put but trust there is a LOT more to Andy Baby's story



Brian Henley
Brian Henley
So sorry to learn about the news re Frank Magazine. Tough news
David Amos
David Amos
I'm not in fact that news made my day




cyndi
cyndi
God got them for lying about me, my daughter and my now deceased ex husband!!!!

David Amos
David Amos
I don't know about any of that but I suspect it was the devil in mean
old me that killed Frank Magazine

Ken Triol
Ken Triol
#Cyndi was that a recent article? I was a recent reader of Frank

cyndi
cyndi
 @Ken Triol  jeannie found it for me in last Nov issue!!!




 https://www.nighttimepodcast.com/episodes/nova-scotia-mass-shooting-2200911
the Nova Scotia Mass Shooting - Sept 11th, 2022 - Weekly updates (with
Paul Palango)
Listen to the aftershow here

In this episode Paul Palango and I discuss recent updates in this ever
evolving story, most specifically the recent testimony of Cnst. Greg
Willey and the ongoing situation surrounding the mass stabbing in
Saskatchewan.

Episode Links:

the Nova Scotia Mass Shooting Timeline Episode:
https://www.nighttimepodcast.com/episodes/nova-scotia-mass-shooting-timeline

the Nova Scotia Mass Shooting Series:
https://www.nighttimepodcast.com/nova-scotia-rampage

Join the Nova Scotia Mass Casualty Discussion Group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/novascotiamasscasualty

Send a tip related to this case: https://www.nighttimepodcast.com/contact

Send a voicememo to the show:

nighttimepodcast.com/contact







https://www.facebook.com/FrankNews/

FRANK is a magazine of news, satire, opinion, politics and humour.
Nova Scotia's own scandal sheet. In Atlantic Canada since 1987.
Subscribe for ONLINE access or the PRINT magazine at FrankMagazine.ca

9,784 people like this
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https://www.frankmagazine.ca/
(902) 420-1668
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 https://www.frankmagazine.ca/home-old/categories/april-18-19-mass-shooting

No Harry Potter magic here just the Hells Angels by Paul Palango
April 18/19 Mass Shooting

August 23, 2022

NO HARRY POTTER MAGIC HERE, JUST THE HELLS ANGELS

By Paul Palango



The deliberate murkiness about Gabriel Wortman’s associations with
criminals in the years prior to his deadly killing sprees has led to
much speculation about what he was really doing.  The RCMP says it
couldn’t find any serious organized crime connections in Wortman’s
past. The Mounties couldn’t figure out where his money came from. The
Mass Casualty Commission – the Spinquiry, as we call it – isn’t all
that curious about any of it, either.



We don’t know precisely what Wortman was doing all those years before
he killed 22 people on April 18 and 19, 2020, but several police
sources have provided Frank Magazine with a potentially helpful road
map.



It begins with Hogwarts.



We’re not talking about Harry Potter’s magic school, but rather
Project Hogwarts, a joint-forces police operation that began in Nova
Scotiain 2016.



The information about Project Hogwarts was provided to Frank Magazine
by a group of current and former law enforcement officers who are
familiar with aspects of what had taken place. One of them is Jimmy
McNulty, the pseudonym we use for a source we’ve been talking to for
this story since almost the beginning.



“In 2015, the Atlantic provinces started seeing a new stage in the
proliferation of outlaw motorcycle gangs,” said Jimmy McNulty.  “The
Hells Angels were moving east, setting up in Charlottetown and Nova
Scotia. The Red Devils, the Angels’ number one support club, set up
shop in Musquodoboit Harbour. Another support club, the Gatekeepers
MC(I remember those guys!-ed.) started opening up clubhouses around
the province. They were supported by the Sedition MC and the
Darksiders MC.”



It had been about 14 years since the Hells Angels had been driven out
of Nova Scotia after a series of devastating police actions, and now
the gang was coming back to town, not only in the Maritimes but also
across the country. It was part of a strategy to control the illegal
drug trade from coast to coast.

The RCMP was on the case. In fact, then Commissioner Robert Paulson
had made taking down the Hells Angels his number one crime-fighting
priority in Canada. RCMP projects were being initiated everywhere to
counter the threat.



“People were noticing that the bikers were setting up shop and began
to complain about it all,” McNulty said. “By the spring of 2016,
police forces in Nova Scotia, led by the RCMP, tried to tackle the
issue. A provincial biker enforcement unit called the CFSEU (Combined
Forces Special Enforcement Unit) was set up as part of RCMP federal
operations. It was called Project Hogwarts.



“Our intention was to show the outlaw motorcycle gangs that we always
control the grounds in our area,” McNulty said. “Our media mouth
pieces used fear tactics to rouse the public about the dangers and we
began our policing.”



Stories to that end, like one by Keith Doucette of The Canadian Press
in late 2016, began sounding the alarm.



“It doesn’t sit well with me for them to be here because I know what
they bring with them,” Doucette wrote, quoting RCMP Corporal Andy
Cook. “I’ve seen them in action, and they bring violence with them and
they bring drug trafficking with them.”



Stephen Schneider, a criminology professor at St. Mary’s University,
told Doucette that the Hells Angels were looking to not only control
the Canadian market but were likely also planning to set up an export
market.



“They are certainly operating pill presses out in B.C. and perhaps
they want to start setting up production facilities in the Maritimes
so they actually can start exporting,” Schneider was quoted as saying.



Throughout 2016 and 2017, the pages of Frank were littered with biker
stories, not only big-picture stuff like who was pulling the strings
in Nova Scotia — full-patch London, Ont. HA David (Hammer) MacDonald
was one of the top guys — but identifying the comings and goings of
many of the smaller players on the ground here, from Annapolis County
to Sydney.



Project Hogwarts was lead by RCMP Inspector Alfredo Bangloy. The
“brains” of the operation was RCMP Sgt. Angela Hawryluk.  Other
members of the original team included then-Cpl. (now Sgt.) Mike Kerr,
RCMP constables Chris Dodge, Scott Morrison, Peter Hurley and Colby
Smith. Halifax Police officers on the team included Detective
constables Steve Fairbairn, Nathan Cross, Curtis Osmond, Mike Carter,
Cory Simmonds and Rebecca Trueman. A civilian working with the unit
was Ellen Urquhart.



As the team conducted its surveillance, they became aware of then
47-year-old Robin Moulton, a high-profile Hells Angels Nomad from New
Brunswick, making his presence known in Nova Scotia.  The Nomads are
elite Hells Angels members who have no set club house and are said to
have earned their ranking by having killed for the club, although
Moulton does not appear to have ever been charged with murder.
Moulton’s lawyer, T.J. Burke did not respond to a request for comment
on this or previous stories.



“We focused a lot on Moulton and even put a tracker on his vehicle,”
McNulty said. “We followed him back to New Brunswick and were able to
identify various real estate and businesses to which he was
associated.



“The investigation was proceeding smoothly until the RCMP brass in New
Brunswick caught wind that we had expanded into New Brunswick and were
chasing bikers on their turf. They were pissed,” McNulty said. “They
wanted to shut us down.”



Before that happened, a parallel operation to Hogwarts was set up in
New Brunswick – Operation Trident.



The Nova Scotia CFSEU investigation is archived in the RCMP’s PROS
record system under file number 2016-979629, McNulty said. The New
Brunswick one is filed in the PROS system as 2016-1141937. Frank
Magazine will be filing a request to see those files in due course.



In 2016, the outlaw-biker obsessed Commissioner Paulson put assistant
commissioner Larry Tremblay in charge of the New Brunswick RCMP. A
former member of the Canadian Navy, Tremblay joined the RCMP and rose
through the ranks. Between 2004 and 2008 he was seconded to the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service. In Ottawa, Tremblay ran
national security, financial crimes and serious organized crime
investigations until 2014. He then moved into protective services,
hobnobbing with the political elite, overseeing security for the Prime
Minister, Governor General and Parliament, a tried-and-true
steppingstone to the upper echelons of the RCMP.



Tremblay had no sooner hit the ground in New Brunswick when he began
to put in place his own hand-picked team to take on the Hells Angels.
Many of them were trusted French speakers, like then Staff-Sgt.
Dustine Rodier, who took command of the Hampton, N.B. detachment,
which was at the centre of the action. people he believed he could
trust. McNulty said that many of the investigators from Hogwarts and
Trident were rolled into two new operations: Projects
J-Thunderstruckand J-Thunder.

Project J-Thunderstruck targeted Hells Angels Nomad Emery “Pit” Martin
who was operating in Northern New Brunswick, along the border with
Quebec.



Project Thunder’s focus was on his fellow Nomad Robin Moulton and the
Red Devils, in particular, in Southern New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.



It could be reasonably argued that creating large interprovincial
operations made sense, considering that the entire population of the
Maritimes is less than that of the city of Toronto.



The new investigators added to the investigation roster included
Inspector Deanna Hill, Inspector Ron DeSilva, Staff Sergeants Bruce
Reid, Sgt. Eric Lanteigne and Constable Julie Messina.  Other key
players included Fredericton Sgt. Mike Berry and Corporal Gerard
Crispo. There were additional investigators from RCMP federal
services, Fredericton Police, the Canadian Border Security Agency and
other policing jurisdictions.



 Here’s where the investigations started to get tricky.



“Any RCMP investigation of outlaw bikers requires an informant,
someone the Mounties can control,” McNulty said.



In early 2017, he said, the team was told that the RCMP indeed had a
new informant for Project Thunder.



“We were told that they had someone in the Truro-Portapique area who
was tied into MS-13 and the Angels,” McNulty said. “The Mounties were
hot on it.”



For those familiar with this ongoing saga, the El Salvadoran street
gang Mara Salvatrucha or MS-13 – “the most notorious street gang in
the Western Hemisphere” – is linked to precisely one person in that
area – Wortman’s friend and handyman Peter Alan Griffon.



The RCMP and the Spinquiry have all but made the 42-year-old Griffon
invisible in spite of his obvious credentials as a witness that many
in the public would like to see testify. Griffon was reportedly
working on Wortman’s property in the hours leading up to the beginning
of the massacres. He called Lisa Banfield’s phone on a number of
occasions. Griffon also told police that he was the person who applied
the RCMP decals to a decommissioned police car, creating the near
perfect replica of an RCMP cruiser that Wortman used during his
13.5-hour spree. Griffon was never charged and his current whereabouts
are unknown.



Parole Board of Canada documents describe the circumstances of his
2014 arrest as part of an investigation into MS-13 elements in
Edmonton.



“In December 2014 police were conducting an investigation into a known
Security Threat Group(STG). You came to their attention through this
investigation and on the same day, police stopped a vehicle you were
driving. The vehicle was searched and police found cash, a baggie with
3 grams of cocaine, a black backpack containing approximately 800
grams of cocaine, more cash, a score sheet, a portable hard drive and
a camera. Police also located multiple cell phones in the vehicle.



“A short time later, police searched a warehouse where you were
living. A number of items were found, including multiple firearms and
ammunition, approximately 4 kilos of cocaine, $30,000 in cash and
various paraphernalia used to buff, package, and traffic cocaine. You
did not have a licence to possess any of the weapons and admitted to
the police that you worked for a cocaine distribution operation and
his job was to store, process, distribute, and transport cocaine to
traffickers.”



Griffon languished in an Alberta jail for several years, partly
because of a day parole violation, and eventually received a
relatively short sentence of two years, eight months and nine days.



The obvious problem with Griffon being the sole RCMP informant was
that in 2017 he was still imprisoned in Alberta and didn’t win his
parole until August 2018. Once he was paroled, Griffon was allowed to
move back to live in his parents’ house, which was located several
hundred meters south of Wortman’s cottage at 200 Portapique Beach
Road.



“We didn’t get a name on the informant, but I firmly believe it was
Wortman and that he was the one who supplied the hydraulic pill
presses to the Hells Angels. He fit the profile perfectly,” McNulty
said.

The danger for the police, McNulty added, was that Wortman was also a
criminal who might have been playing both sides at the same time.



Wherever the truth lies, McNulty said that there was likely a natural
evolution of the relationship between Wortman and the RCMP. Wortman
had family members who were Mounties and he associated with police
officers on a regular basis. It likely all began with a simple
relationship, exchanging information with police officers such as
Halifax constable Barry Warnell and RCMP constable Greg Wiley, who
visited Wortman 16 times until early 2017.



“The thing to note is that Wiley told the MCC that he had no notes
about their conversations, which I find hard to believe. That’s not
the way the Mounties roll. They report everything,” McNulty said.
“What Wiley did say was that he would check in with Wortman about
minor criminal activity in the community. That tells you something
right there.”



McNulty and their group believe that as Project Thunder got off the
ground, the RCMP relationship with Wortman moved to the next level –
agent.



“That’s where the big money is,” McNulty said. “He would have had a
professional handler at that point. I believe that Mountie was
Constable Peter Hurley. That was his specialty. He was the kind of
handler who promised the moon to potential informants and even more so
to agents, but the RCMP is notorious for not following through.”



Once New Brunswick took over, Inspector DeSilva, then head of the
Federal Serious and Organized Crime Unit, assumed the handler
responsibility, McNulty said.



We may never know the true story. It would be a criminal offense for a
Mountie to reveal the identity of an informant or agent, even after
they are dead. The RCMP undercover manual instructs members to lie to
everyone but a judge about such matters.



What we do know is what we are allowed to know.



When Moulton was arrested in August 2017, he was charged with
possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking and possession of
a restricted firearm – a 9 mm Beretta. Not much considering all the
effort when you think about it.



At the time of his arrest, CBC News asked then Fredericton Police
Chief Leanne Fitchabout the investigation. She said: “Getting down
into the weeds of any particular aspect of ongoing or past or present
issues could jeopardize investigations and officer and public safety,
so I won’t be commenting on any specifics.”



In 2018, Moulton received a rather short sentence of four years and six months.



There was a good reason why that happened, McNulty said.



“The agent was still in place and the RCMP couldn’t reveal everything
they knew because that would point to the agent, so they left
important things out so they could continue their investigation,”
McNulty said. “It could be argued that there was a miscarriage of
justice. Moulton’s lawyer wasn’t given all the facts about what the
police had been doing.”



The twin projects concluded on April 9, 2020 with the announcement by
Inspector DeSilva that two more Hells Angels member and two Red Devils
had been arrested in New Brunswick over the previous seven weeks.
DeSilva went out of his way to link the arrests to the previous ones
of Moulton and Martin, three and two years earlier, respectively. In
October, 2021 Martin received a seven-and-a-half year prison term for
cocaine trafficking and acting in the benefit of a criminal
organization.



“One of the most dangerous times is the end of an operation,” another
police source said, echoing the thoughts of others. “By that time, the
bad guys, especially the bikers, usually have a good idea about who
the rat was.”



Nine days after the projects closed, Wortman began his rampage.



From the closed and dangerous world of outlaw bikers, I continue to
hear stories about how Wortman was identified as a snitch and had his
life threatened over what happened to Moulton, Martin and the others.
No one yet will go on the record, which comes as no surprise,
considering the, um, grave consequences.



As for the Mounties, they have their own Hogwarts thing – a magical
ability to make controversies disappear into the wind.



In the spring of 2020, around the time of the massacres or shortly
afterward, multiple sources say that Hurley was transferred to
Ferryland, a small RCMP detachment on the Avalon Peninsula in
Newfoundland, about an hour’s drive south of St. John’s. In recent
months, he has taken down his social media.



Others, such as Staff-Sgt. Reid were not so lucky. Shortly before 2
p.m. on October 25, 2019, he committed suicide at a baseball diamond
in Rothesay, N.B. Reid suffered from typical psychological maladies
affecting many police officers, but those who knew him closely say he
was particularly distraught over his unheeded warnings about
significant failings in the overall Hells Angels’ investigations.
According to sources in New Brunswick, Reid believed a number of
people – as many as four – had been murdered during the course of the
investigation largely due to the RCMP’s shortcomings. Reid told people
that he was worried sick about one of the agents that the force had
employed. He strongly believed that the person was dangerous and
unsuited to the task, but that no one would listen to him.



Fifteen months after the massacres, New Brunswick Attorney General
Hugh Flemming took the unprecedented step of having Asst. Commissioner
Tremblay removed from his posting. Flemming stated in a letter to RCMP
Commissioner Brenda Lucki that he had “lost faith” in Tremblay, but
gave no specifics about the roots of his dissatisfaction.



Nova Scotia’s underperforming boss, Assistant Commissioner Leona (Lee)
Bergerman, was allowed to resign, as were a significant number of her
underlings who were involved in the RCMP response to the massacres.



Before she retired Sgt. Hawryluk was the Mountie in charge of writing
the informations to obtain search warrants in the post-massacres
investigation. She became a vocal critic of Frank Magazine and me, to
the point of lambasting a small store owner near where she lived over
his selling my recent book, 22 Murders.



The other trick that the RCMP employs when faced with embarrassment is
to promote those who might have failed and safely bury their possible
transgressions in the upper echelons of the force. For example, Chief
Superintendent Chris Leatherwas moved to a federal policing leadership
role in Ottawa.



Staff-Sgt Rodier was promoted to Inspector and was running the
Communicatons wing and 911 operations for the RCMP on the weekend of
the massacres. After that debacle she received another promotion to
Superintendent.



Superintendent Darren Campbell was given a bump to Chief
Superintendent and placed in charge of operations in New Brunswick.



His new boss was now Assistant Commissioner Deanna Hill. She was a key
player in Projects Thunder and Thunderstruck and afterward was placed
in charge of the RCMP in Newfoundland.



“Tremblay put his people in place all over the Maritimes so that he
could control things” McNulty said. “After he was pushed out, they
brought back Deanna Hill to replace him. It’s just a continuation of
what had been going on. You can’t help but think that they’ve put
people in place to protect the untold story that scares the shit out
of all of them.”



Next there is DeSilva. We don’t know yet what he really did – and the
RCMP would never confirm or deny if he was Wortman’s handler -- but
the Mounties obviously thought he did a terrific job. DeSilva was
named Officer of the Year in 2017 and eventually was promoted to
Superintendent. He is currently the officer in charge of the Codiac
Detachment, essentially the municipal police for Moncton and its
sister communities of Dieppe and Riverview. That’s where at least
three of the four murders may have taken place.



One might think that the Mass Casualty Commission might be interested
in poking around in all this, but one of its three Commissioners is
Leanne Fitch who, to echo her CBC quote, is not the kind of person who
likes “getting down into the weeds” of police investigations. The
entire Commission appears to be laser focused on not getting to the
bottom of the story, having avoided any potentially embarrassing
exploration like that for about six months.



Its circular logic goes something like this: “We can’t explore
anything that we haven’t been able to document, and we are not going
to search for documents that we haven’t been told about because our
mandate is not to find fault or cause trauma.”



Our mandate is quite the opposite.



If you can lend us a hand, please step forward and tell us what you
know. The greater community would appreciate it very much.



paulpalango@protonmail.com


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The Media and the Murders by Rick Howe
August 6, 2022




The media and the murders

by Rick Howe



Most Nova Scotians today know the ba­sics of what transpired April
18th and 19th, 2020 when something snapped in the mind of Dartmouth
denturist Gabriel Wortman, who, dressed as an RCMP officer and
driv­ing a replica RCMP vehicle, launched a two day murderous rampage
that left 22 Nova Scotians and one unborn child dead and the gunman
himself killed by the RCMP.



It was the worst mass killing in Canadian history and it happened here
at home. You might think getting the full story behind what happened
would be a priority for the main­stream media. Sadly that has not been
the case.



Even as the Mass Casualty Commission promises to get to the truth of
what happened that tragic weekend, many Nova Scotians remain
skeptical. There are some who be­lieve the Commission is party to a
cover-up and there never was any intention to reveal the whole truth
about the actions of Gabriel Wortman and Canada’s national police
force, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.



Critics believe this has become an effort to deflect from the
relationship between them. Why isn’t Wortman’s criminal record and his
association with a criminal motorcycle gang not part of the MCC
inquiry? The crit­ics believe there is an effort to cover-up the
RCMP’s involvement or relationship with Wortman and his relationship
with the Hells Angels. Was Gabriel Wortman a confidential police
informant? Yet there is little effort by the mainstream media to get
to the real story, beyond the pablum fed to them by the RCMP and the
MCC.



I’ll give the Chronicle Herald a thumbs up for facts unearthed by its
reporters in the thousands of documents dumped online by the
Commission, seemingly an effort to bury pertinent details. The CBC’s
Elizabeth Mc­Millan has, through freedom of information requests, also
revealed new details. How­ever, it stops there.



The mainstream Nova Scotia media need to wake up to the very real
possibilities this is much more than just one man’s two day killing
spree. Serious questions need to be asked and revealed about events
leading up to that weekend, the April weekend itself and the days and
weeks following the murders.



Where is CTV’s Rick Grant when you need him?



Sadly, those days of investigative reporters breaking news stories are
long gone. Hali­fax’s all-news talk station has no reporters. When was
the last time CTV, CBC or Global broke a major story? CTV for example,
has done a reasonable job reporting details from the testimony before
the Mass Inquiry Com­mission, but in the days following the mass
killings, the mainstream media continued to accept the narrative
presented by the RCMP even as details were few, including no accu­rate
account of the number of people killed. Radio, television and
newspaper reports of­ten included verbatim RCMP news releases. It was
left to the alternative media to carry the ball.



Thanks to online sites like Little Grey Cells and quasi-news
organizations like the Halifax Examiner, and especially Frank
Magazine, we began getting details not pro­vided by the RCMP. We were
beginning to realize the Mounties were holding key facts from the
public.



Frank’s release of the 911 calls from Wortman’s victims and video from
his take-down at the Big Stop in Enfield were ma­jor scoops. And
Frank’s Paul Palango has been ruthless is revealing more details about
Wortman, his criminal record and his asso­ciation with motorcycle
gangs and police. He has been a thorn in the side of the RCMP to the
point where the RCMP’s media co-ordi­nator referred to Palango as “an
asshole.” He alone has kept this story fresh in the minds of those who
follow alternative media.

Then there’s the Lisa Banfield story. Wort­man’s long-time companion
was indeed a victim of abuse, but the MCC’s decision not to allow
cross examination by lawyers for his victims because she was a victim
was more evidence for those screaming cover-up. Any effort to question
her about her story the night the massacres began was denied.



Why? She is a key witness who could pro­vide more details about what
might have set Wortman off and her story about escap­ing handcuffs
while locked in the gunman’s RCMP replica police cruiser and spending
the night huddled inside a log in the woods is sketchy at best. And
again it is only Frank and Paul Palango who are asking ques­tions
about her claims. The Examiner’s Tim Bousquet bought into the MCC’s
version of events and recently told a critic to “fuck off.”



Palango told me quite emphatically this is a story about the failure
of police, but he thinks the mainstream media has lost inter­est.
Palango says he has no doubt a cover-up is underway. He got support
for his claims from an unlikely source, retired CTV anchor Steve
Murphy. In two commentaries Murphy agreed there is more to this story
than we are being told and suggested the so called conspiracy
theorists were on the right track. Murphy also said Lisa Banfield
should have been cross-examined by family lawyers. Out­side of his
comments, it has been crickets from the mainstream media.



”There is no longer a sense of pursuit,” Palango told me.



“It’s like the instinct had been bred out of reporters. No one is
doing anything.”



So many questions need answers. Why did the Mounties call for help
from the RCMP in New Brunswick? Why not seek aid from nearby police in
Truro or Amherst? Why were highway blockades not set up? Why was a man
with known ties to the Hells An­gels and a neighbour and a friend of
Wort­man’s evacuated with his father and mother from their home in
Portapique while four children whose parents had just been mur­dered
huddled in one home for hours? Why was Constable Heidi Stephenson,
basi­cally a traffic cop, looking for a killer alone in her police
car? Was the gunman a police confidential informant? What was Gabriel
Wortman’s connection to the Hells Angels?



The truth is out there. But is the Nova Sco­tia media up to the task
of unravelling the full story behind this terrible tragedy? Stay
tuned. There’s clearly a lot more to learn.


tips@frankmagazine.ca

--

Andrew Douglas
Frank Magazine
phone: (902) 420-1668
fax: (902) 423-0281
cell: (902) 221-0386
andrew@frankmagazine.ca
www.frankmagazine.ca

On 9/18/22, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:
> https://www.youtube.com/c/NighttimePod/videos
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Ministerial Correspondence Unit - Justice Canada <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 22:40:17 +0000
> Subject: Automatic Reply
> To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>
> Thank you for writing to the Honourable David Lametti, Minister of
> Justice and Attorney General of Canada.
>
> Due to the volume of correspondence addressed to the Minister, please
> note that there may be a delay in processing your email. Rest assured
> that your message will be carefully reviewed.
>
> We do not respond to correspondence that contains offensive language.
>
> -------------------
>
> Merci d'avoir écrit à l'honorable David Lametti, ministre de la
> Justice et procureur général du Canada.
>
> En raison du volume de correspondance adressée au ministre, veuillez
> prendre note qu'il pourrait y avoir un retard dans le traitement de
> votre courriel. Nous tenons à vous assurer que votre message sera lu
> avec soin.
>
> Nous ne répondons pas à la correspondance contenant un langage offensant.
>
> On 9/18/22, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:
>> https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2022/09/need-i-remind-pierre-poilievre-et-al.html
>>
>> Saturday, 10 September 2022
>>
>> Need I remind Pierre Poilievre et al that some folks have a long
>> memory and keep good records as well?
>>
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qG2gusl-oQw&ab_channel=%C3%89ricGrenier
>>
>> The Writ Podcast - Episode #60: Pierre Poilievre, Week 1
>> 3,606 views
>> Sep 16, 2022
>> Éric Grenier
>> 1.35K subscribers
>> Shannon, Supriya and Aaron join me to chat about Poilievre's first
>> week as leader and the Trudeau government's inflation relief plan.
>>
>>  https://www.thewrit.ca/
>>
>> Pierre Poilievre won the Conservative leadership race with more
>> support on the first ballot than any previous leadership candidate for
>> the Conservative Party or its predecessors. It was a big win.
>>
>> His first week, though, did not go so smoothly after one Quebec MP,
>> Alain Rayes, quit caucus, citing Poilievre’s tone and style of
>> politics as the reason. That the party had to subsequently apologize
>> for text messages sent to party members in Rayes’s riding asking them
>> to call his office to voice their displeasure made Rayes’s point for
>> him.
>>
>> Meanwhile, at a Liberal caucus retreat in New Brunswick, Justin
>> Trudeau announced new measures meant to provide relief from inflation
>> — an issue Poilievre has been hammering the government over for
>> months. Jagmeet Singh of the NDP was quick to claim credit.
>>
>> So it’s been a bit of a week.
>>
>> To discuss it all, I’m joined this week by the CBC’s Aaron Wherry,
>> Shannon Proudfoot, reporter with The Globe and Mail and Supriya
>> Dwivedi, Director of Policy and Engagement at the Centre for Media,
>> Technology and Democracy, and Senior Counsel for Enterprise Canada.
>> Supriya is also the co-host of the Seriously Podcast.
>>
>>
>> 152 Comments
>>
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Welcome to the Circus
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Davey Baby and I go back to 2004
>>  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_UUYvG5hIc&ab_channel=DavidAmos
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Floyd Anderson
>> Floyd Anderson
>> The journalist who interrupted him apologized for his rude behavior.
>> Take it as that. He was very rude.
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> True
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTnd4cGFULA&ab_channel=TrueNorth
>>
>>
>>
>> Poilievre Derangement Syndrome returns with a VENGEANCE
>> 24,985 views
>> Premiered Sep 16, 2022
>> True North
>> 84.2K subscribers
>> The legacy media’s knives are out for Pierre Poilievre since winning
>> the Conservative leadership race less than one week ago. From heckling
>> the Carleton MP during his first presser to criticizing his move into
>> the official residence of the Leader of the Offical Opposition, it’s
>> clear Poilievre Derangement Syndrome is back with a vengeance!
>>
>> This week on Fake News Friday, Andrew Lawton and Harrison Faulkner
>> look into the legacy media’s most ridiculous takes on Poilievre’s win
>> and their rush to defend Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
>>
>> Also on the show, the legacy media rallies behind the need for King
>> Charles II (not III) to address colonialism and reparations. This may
>> prove to be difficult considering he hasn’t been around since the 17th
>> Century!
>>
>>
>>
>> 500 Comments
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Welcome to the Circus Davey Baby and I go back to 2004
>>  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_UUYvG5hIc&ab_channel=DavidAmos
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT43FgtAGXk&ab_channel=%C3%89ricGrenier
>>
>>
>>
>> The Writ Podcast - Episode #59: One last look at the Conservative
>> leadership race
>> 1217 views
>> Sep 8, 2022
>>
>> Éric Grenier
>> 1.3K subscribers
>> Stephanie Levitz, Tim Powers and Chad Rogers join me to discuss what
>> to expect when the next leader of the Conservative Party is revealed
>> on Saturday.
>>
>>  https://www.thewrit.ca/
>>
>> The Conservative leadership race will be finally coming to a close on
>> Saturday when the winner will be announced in Ottawa.
>>
>> The safe bet is that Pierre Poilievre will win — perhaps even on the
>> first ballot. But what will the results mean not only for the
>> consensus front runner, but for Jean Charest, Leslyn Lewis, Roman
>> Baber and Scott Aitchison?
>>
>> Does it matter if Poilievre wins on the first ballot? What’s next for
>> Charest should he lose? What will the results mean for Lewis and the
>> social conservative wing of the party?
>>
>> And did Baber and Aitchison succeed in what they set out to do by
>> launching their long-shot candidacies?
>>
>> To answer these questions and lots more, I’m joined this week by Tim
>> Powers of Summa Strategies, Chad Rogers of Crestview Strategy and
>> Stephanie Levitz of the Toronto Star.
>>
>>
>> 15  Comments
>>
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Methinks Tim Powers of Summa Strategies, Chad Rogers of Crestview
>> Strategy and Stephanie Levitz of the Toronto Star must have read the
>> email I sent on September 12th by now N'esy Pas?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Survey Says???
>>
>> Brent Clouda
>> Brent Clouda
>> Poilievre
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>>  @Brent Clouda  Thats easy to predict after the fact
>>
>> Brent Clouda
>> Brent Clouda
>>  @David Amos  I voted for him
>>
>> Highlighted reply
>> Brent Clouda
>> Brent Clouda
>>  @David Amos  And I"m going to vote for him again, Pierre Poliievre
>> for Prime Minister. That is if the NDP/Liberal socialist party, ever
>> allow the peasants to vote again.
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>>  @Brent Clouda  I have been running against all of them since 2004
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>>  @Brent Clouda  Enjoy
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cFOKT6TlSE&ab_channel=Rogerstv
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> Kings County Record June 22, 2004
>> Raising a Little Hell- Lively Debate Provokes Crowd
>>
>> By Erin Hatfield
>>
>> "If you don't like what you got, why don't you change it? If your
>> world is all screwed up, rearrange it."
>>
>> The 1979 Trooper song Raise a Little Hell blared on the speakers at
>> the 8th Hussars Sports Center Friday evening as people filed in to
>> watch the Fundy candidates debate the issues. It was an accurate, if
>> unofficial, theme song for the debate.
>>
>> The crowd of over 200 spectators was dwarfed by the huge arena, but as
>> they chose their seats, it was clear the battle lines were drawn.
>> Supporters of Conservative candidate Rob Moore naturally took the blue
>> chairs on the right of the rink floor while John Herron's Liberalswent
>> left. There were splashes of orange, supporters of NDP Pat Hanratty,
>> mixed throughout. Perhaps the loudest applause came from a row towards
>> the back, where supporters of independent candidate David Amos sat.
>>
>> The debate was moderated by Leo Melanson of CJCW Radio and was
>> organized by the Sussex Valley Jaycees. Candidates wereasked a barrage
>> of questions bypanelists Gisele McKnight of the Kings County Record
>> and Lisa Spencer of CJCW.
>>
>> Staying true to party platforms for the most part, candidates
>> responded to questions about the gun registry, same sex marriage, the
>> exodus of young people from the Maritimes and regulated gas prices.
>> Herron and Moore were clear competitors,constantly challenging each
>> other on their answers and criticizing eachothers’ party leaders.
>> Hanratty flew under the radar, giving short, concise responses to the
>> questions while Amos provided some food for thought and a bit of comic
>> relief with quirky answers. "I was raised with a gun," Amos said in
>> response to the question of thenational gun registry. "Nobody's
>> getting mine and I'm not paying 10 cents for it."
>>
>> Herron, a Progressive Conservative MP turned Liberal, veered from his
>> party'splatform with regard to gun control. "It was ill advised but
>> well intentioned," Herron said. "No matter what side of the house I am
>> on, I'm voting against it." Pat Hanratty agreed there were better
>> places for the gun registry dollars to be spent.Recreational hunters
>> shouldn't have been penalized by this gun registry," he said.
>>
>> The gun registry issues provoked the tempers of Herron and Moore. At
>> one point Herron got out of his seat and threw a piece of paper in
>> front of Moore. "Read that," Herron said to Moore, referring to the
>> voting record of Conservative Party leader Steven Harper. According to
>> Herron, Harper voted in favour of the registry on the first and second
>> readings of the bill in 1995. "He voted against it when it counted, at
>> final count," Moore said. "We needa government with courage to
>> register sex offenders rather than register the property of law
>> abiding citizens."
>>
>> The crowd was vocal throughout the evening, with white haired men and
>> women heckling from the Conservative side. "Shut up John," one woman
>> yelled. "How can you talk about selling out?" a man yelled whenHerron
>> spoke about his fear that the Conservatives are selling farmers out.
>>
>> Although the Liberal side was less vocal, Kings East MLA Leroy
>> Armstrong weighed in at one point. "You’re out of touch," Armstrong
>> yelled to Moore from the crowd when the debate turned to the cost of
>> post-secondary education. Later in the evening Amos challenged
>> Armstrong to a public debate of their own. "Talk is cheap. Any time,
>> anyplace," Armstrong responded.
>>
>> As the crowd made its way out of the building following the debate,
>> candidates worked the room. They shook hands with well-wishers and
>> fielded questions from spectators-all part of the decision-making
>> process for the June 28 vote.
>>
>> Cutline – David Amos, independent candidate in Fundy, with some of his
>> favourite possessions—motorcycles.
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>> The Unconventional Candidate
>>
>> David Amos Isn’t Campaigning For Your Vote, But….
>>
>> By Gisele McKnight
>>
>> FUNDY—He has a pack of cigarettes in his shirt pocket, a chain on his
>> wallet, a beard at least a foot long, 60 motorcycles and a cell phone
>> that rings to the tune of "Yankee Doodle."
>>
>> Meet the latest addition to the Fundy ballot—David Amos.
>>
>> The independent candidate lives in Milton, Massachusetts with his wife
>> and two children, but his place of residence does not stop him from
>> running for office in Canada.
>>
>> One has only to be at least 18, a Canadian citizen and not be in jail
>> to meet Elections Canada requirements.
>>
>> When it came time to launch his political crusade, Amos chose his
>> favourite place to do so—Fundy.
>>
>> Amos, 52, is running for political office because of his
>> dissatisfaction with politicians.
>>
>> "I’ve become aware of much corruption involving our two countries," he
>> said. "The only way to fix corruption is in the political forum."
>>
>> The journey that eventually led Amos to politics began in Sussex in
>> 1987. He woke up one morning disillusioned with life and decided he
>> needed to change his life.
>>
>> "I lost my faith in mankind," he said. "People go through that
>> sometimes in midlife."
>>
>> So Amos, who’d lived in Sussex since 1973, closed his Four Corners
>> motorcycle shop, paid his bills and hit the road with Annie, his 1952
>> Panhead motorcycle.
>>
>> "Annie and I rode around for awhile (three years, to be exact)
>> experiencing the milk of human kindness," he said. "This is how you
>> renew your faith in mankind – you help anyone you can, you never ask
>> for anything, but you take what they offer."
>>
>> For those three years, they offered food, a place to sleep, odd jobs
>> and conversation all over North America.
>>
>> Since he and Annie stopped wandering, he has married, fathered a son
>> and a daughter and become a house-husband – Mr. Mom, as he calls
>> himself.
>>
>> He also describes himself in far more colourful terms—a motorcyclist
>> rather than a biker, a "fun-loving, free-thinking, pig-headed
>> individual," a "pissed-off Maritimer" rather than an activist, a proud
>> Canadian and a "wild colonial boy."
>>
>> Ironically, the man who is running for office has never voted in his
>> life.
>>
>> "But I have no right to criticize unless I offer my name," he said.
>> "It’s alright to bitch in the kitchen, but can you walk the walk?"
>>
>> Amos has no intention of actively campaigning.
>>
>> "I didn’t appreciate it when they (politicians) pounded on my door
>> interrupting my dinner," he said. "If people are interested, they can
>> call me. I’m not going to drive my opinions down their throats."
>>
>> And he has no campaign budget, nor does he want one.
>>
>> "I won’t take any donations," he said. "Just try to give me some. It’s
>> not about money. It goes against what I’m fighting about."
>>
>> What he’s fighting for is the discussion of issues – tainted blood,
>> the exploitation of the Maritimes’ gas and oil reserves and NAFTA, to
>> name a few.
>>
>> "The political issues in the Maritimes involve the three Fs – fishing,
>> farming and forestry, but they forget foreign issues," he said. "I’m
>> death on NAFTA, the back room deals and free trade. I say chuck it
>> (NAFTA) out the window.
>>
>> NAFTA is the North American Free Trade Agreement which allows an
>> easier flow of goods between Canada, the United States and Mexico.
>>
>> Amos disagrees with the idea that a vote for him is a wasted vote.
>>
>> "There are no wasted votes," he said. "I want people like me,
>> especially young people, to pay attention and exercise their right.
>> Don’t necessarily vote for me, but vote."
>>
>> Although…if you’re going to vote anyway, Amos would be happy to have
>> your X by his name.
>>
>> "I want people to go into that voting booth, see my name, laugh and
>> say, ‘what the hell.’"
>>
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>>  @Brent Clouda  Ask your hero why CBC always denies that I am running
>> https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/fundy-royal-riding-profile-1.3274276
>>
>>  (I posted this twice and it was blocked twice eed I say I now know why?)
>> David Amos
>> David Amos
>>  @Brent Clouda  Did you block my last 2 replies???
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Sylvius the Mad
>> Sylvius the Mad
>> The voting process was surprisingly complicated. I really thought the
>> complexity of the ballot and the voting procedure would suppress voter
>> turnout.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Justin H
>> Justin H
>> News flash 📸 Pierre Poilievre wins 🏆
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTPq2Oc2t0g&ab_channel=%C3%89ricGrenier
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> The Writ Podcast - Episode #50: Down goes Patrick Brown
>> 860 views
>> Jul 7, 2022
>> Éric Grenier
>> 1.35K subscribers
>> Catherine Cullen, Tim Powers and Chad Rogers are back to discuss the
>> latest drama in the Conservative leadership race.
>>
>> https://www.thewrit.ca/
>>
>> Late on Tuesday night, Patrick Brown was booted from the Conservative
>> leadership contest for his campaign’s alleged breaking of the rules
>> that govern political financing. Brown denies the allegations and puts
>> the blame on Pierre Poilievre’s campaign for engineering his ouster.
>>
>> This story is far from over, as it appears Brown might go to the
>> courts to challenge his disqualification. Meanwhile, the other
>> campaigns need to re-calibrate and figure out where they go from here.
>>
>>  There’s a lot to discuss.  So, this week I’m joined by Tim Powers of
>> Summa Strategies, Chad Rogers of Crestview Strategy and Catherine
>> Cullen, senior reporter with CBC News, to break it all down.
>>
>>  https://summastrategies.ca/
>> https://www.crestviewstrategy.ca/
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: Premier of Ontario | Premier ministre de l’Ontario
>> <Premier@ontario.ca>
>> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 22:18:56 +0000
>> Subject: Automatic reply: I bet after the Wannabe Mayor Mark Sutcliffe
>> reviews a couple of clips fom his own show he will remember me EH Rob
>> Moore and Mr Jones???
>> To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>>
>> Thank you for your email. Your thoughts, comments and input are greatly
>> valued.
>>
>> You can be assured that all emails and letters are carefully read,
>> reviewed and taken into consideration.
>>
>> There may be occasions when, given the issues you have raised and the
>> need to address them effectively, we will forward a copy of your
>> correspondence to the appropriate government official. Accordingly, a
>> response may take several business days.
>>
>> Thanks again for your email.
>> ______
>>
>> Merci pour votre courriel. Nous vous sommes très reconnaissants de
>> nous avoir fait part de vos idées, commentaires et observations.
>>
>> Nous tenons à vous assurer que nous lisons attentivement et prenons en
>> considération tous les courriels et lettres que nous recevons.
>>
>> Dans certains cas, nous transmettrons votre message au ministère
>> responsable afin que les questions soulevées puissent être traitées de
>> la manière la plus efficace possible. En conséquence, plusieurs jours
>> ouvrables pourraient s’écouler avant que nous puissions vous répondre.
>>
>> Merci encore pour votre courriel.
>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 19:18:24 -0300
>> Subject: I bet after the Wannabe Mayor Mark Sutcliffe reviews a couple
>> of clips fom his own show he will remember me EH Rob Moore and Mr
>> Jones???
>> To: mark@marksutcliffe.ca, Jim.Watson@ottawa.ca,
>> endottawaelectiongambling@outlook.com, bjc@bernardcouchman.ca,
>> info@bobchiarelli.ca, mayor@brandonbay.ca, catherine@mckenney2022.ca,
>> celinedebassige@yahoo.ca, contact@macdonald4mayor.com,
>> jreg4mayor@gmail.com, jacobsolomonmayor@gmail.com,
>> info@mikeforottawa.ca, kadri4mayor@kadri.ca, voteparam@gmail.com,
>> denise.batters@sen.parl.gc.ca, "kevin.waugh"<kevin.waugh@parl.gc.ca>,
>> "andrew.scheer"<andrew.scheer@parl.gc.ca>, "Warren.Steinley"
>> <Warren.Steinley@parl.gc.ca>, "fraser.tolmie"
>> <fraser.tolmie@parl.gc.ca>, "Rosemarie.Falk"
>> <Rosemarie.Falk@parl.gc.ca>, info@tessafranklin.com,
>> lstinson@bell.net, lainejohnson4college@gmail.com, info@seandevine.ca,
>> laura@laurashantz.ca, info@arieltroster.com, info@jeffleiper.ca,
>> info@menard2022.ca, electyvette@yvetteashiri.ca,
>> info@horizonottawa.ca, communitysolidarity.ottawa@gmail.com, oldmaison
>> <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>, andrew
>> <andrew@frankmagazine.ca>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, pm
>> <pm@pm.gc.ca>, paulpalango <paulpalango@protonmail.com>, premier
>> <premier@ontario.ca>, cathyforkanata@gmail.com,
>> christine.moulaison.kn@gmail.com, viorelcopil@gmail.com,
>> info@clarkekelly.ca, gregforottawa@gmail.com, info@nagmanisharma.ca,
>> info@nickdrain.ca, sasha@sashaduguay.ca, stephanie.maghnam@gmail.com,
>> info@voteglen.ca, mathewduchesne@gmail.com, tanya@votetanya.ca,
>> vote.othmanalhusain@gmail.com, voteroberthill@gmail.com,
>> theresakavanagh@rogers.com, info@delvasontarioparty.ca,
>> info@patmcgarry.ca, wendy@wendydavidson.ca, vote@jamesdean.ca,
>> info@josephbenami.ca, michaelwoodottawa@gmail.com,
>> goingthextramyles@gmail.com, "rob.moore"<rob.moore@parl.gc.ca>,
>> "Robert. Jones"<Robert.Jones@cbc.ca>
>> Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Candice.Bergen"
>> <Candice.Bergen@parl.gc.ca>, "pierre.poilievre"
>> <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, "jake.stewart"
>> <jake.stewart@parl.gc.ca>
>>
>> https://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/meet-the-candidates-for-mayor-and-councillor-in-the-city-of-ottawa-election-1.6026890
>>
>> Meet the candidates for mayor and councillor in the city of Ottawa
>> election
>>
>> Mark Sutcliffe is a broadcaster and entrepreneur. He co-founded the
>> Ottawa Business Journal and worked on Newstalk 580 CFRA and CityNews.
>> For more information, visit marksutcliffe.ca.
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_UUYvG5hIc&ab_channel=DavidAmos
>>
>> CPAC Nov 8th short
>> 9 views
>> Nov 10, 2015
>> David Amos
>> 28 subscribers
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Xi3MATqXaY&t=563s&ab_channel=DavidAmos
>>
>> Sept 25th CPAC
>> 22 views
>> Nov 9, 2015
>> David Amos
>> 28 subscribers
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>>> Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2021 14:48:36 -0300
>>> Subject: Fwd: [Non-DoD Source] Fwd: Methinks the evil lawyer Howie
>>> Cooper made a deal with the VERY NASTY FBI dudes in Beantown N'esy Pas
>>> Howie Anglin?
>>> To: nia_ig.fct@navy.mil, washington field
>>> <washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, "Ian.Shugart"
>>> <Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca>
>>> Cc: "Brenda.Lucki"<Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Jonathan.Vance"
>>> <Jonathan.Vance@forces.gc.ca>, "Greta.Bossenmaier"
>>> <Greta.Bossenmaier@hq.nato.int>
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: NIA_IG <nia_ig.fct@navy.mil>
>>> Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2021 11:03:08 +0000
>>> Subject: RE: [Non-DoD Source] Fwd: Methinks the evil lawyer Howie
>>> Cooper made a deal with the VERY NASTY FBI dudes in Beantown N'esy Pas
>>> Howie Anglin?
>>> To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> Dear David Amos,
>>> The Naval Intelligence Activity (NIA) Office of the Inspector General
>>> (IG) reviewed your email and attached .WAV file provided to the NIA
>>> Hotline on 2 April 2021. I found no connection to the United States
>>> Navy or United States Naval Intelligence.
>>>
>>> Naval Inspectors General exist to improve the efficiency and
>>> effectiveness of US Navy Programs, and strive to eliminate and prevent
>>> waste, fraud, and abuse with their respective departments. Naval IGs
>>> are restricted to assessing matters falling within the purview of
>>> their respective commanders.
>>>
>>> Citing the lack of an apparent connection to the US Navy or Naval
>>> Intelligence, I am unable to provide further assistance, or provide
>>> direct referral to any other agency or activity.
>>>
>>> Sincerely,
>>>
>>> Mark Koneda
>>> Investigator
>>> Naval Intelligence Activity
>>>    Office of the Inspector General
>>> NIA_IG@navy.mil
>>> (301)669-3030 (unclass)
>>> TSVOIP 560-3030
>>>
>>> INSPECTOR GENERAL SENSITIVE INFORMATION - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The
>>> information contained in this email and any accompanying attachments
>>> may contain Inspector General sensitive or pre-decisional information,
>>> which is protected from mandatory disclosure under the Freedom of
>>> Information Act (FOIA, 5 USC Section 552). It should not be released
>>> to unauthorized persons. If you are not the intended recipient of this
>>> information, any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of
>>> any action in reliance on this information is prohibited. If you
>>> received this email in error, please notify this office by email or by
>>> calling (301) 669-3030.
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
>>> Sent: Friday, April 2, 2021 12:50 PM
>>> To: NIA_IG <nia_ig.fct@navy.mil>
>>> Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>> Subject: [Non-DoD Source] Fwd: Methinks the evil lawyer Howie Cooper
>>> made a deal with the VERY NASTY FBI dudes in Beantown N'esy Pas Howie
>>> Anglin?
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: Art.McDonald@forces.gc.ca
>>> Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 13:49:10 +0000
>>> Subject: Automatic reply: Methinks the evil lawyer Howie Cooper made a
>>> deal with the VERY NASTY FBI dudes in Beantown N'esy Pas Howie Anglin?
>>> To: motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>>
>>> The Acting Chief of the Defence Staff is LGen Wayne Eyre, he may be
>>> reached at wayne.eyre@forces.gc.ca.
>>>
>>> Le Chef d'état-major de la Défense par intérim est le LGen Wayne Eyre.
>>> Il peut être rejoint au wayne.eyre@forces.gc.ca.
>>>
>>> Art McD
>>> He/Him // Il/Lui
>>> Admiral/amiral Art McDonald
>>>
>>> Chief of the Defence Staff (CDS)
>>> Canadian Armed Forces
>>> art.mcdonald@forces.gc.ca<mailto:art.mcdonald@forces.gc.ca> / Tel:
>>> 613-992-5054
>>>
>>> Chef d’état-major de la Defense (CÉMD)
>>> Forces armées canadiennes
>>> art.mcdonald@forces.gc.ca<mailto:art.mcdonald@forces.gc.ca> / Tél:
>>> 613-992-5054
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> > > > From: "McKnight, Gisele"McKnight.Gisele@kingscorecord.com
>>>> > > > To: lcampenella@ledger.com
>>>> > > > Cc:motomaniac_02186@hotmail.com
>>>> > > Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 2:53 PM
>>>> > > > Subject: David Amos
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > > Hello Lisa,
>>>> > > > > David Amos asked me to contact you. I met him last June after
>>>> > > > > he
>>>> > became
>>>> > > an
>>>> > > > > independent (not representing any political party) candidate in
>>>> > > > > our
>>>> > > > federal
>>>> > > > > election that was held June 28.
>>>> > > > >
>>>> > > > > He was a candidate in our constituency of Fundy (now called
>>>> > > Fundy-Royal).
>>>> > > > I
>>>> > > > > wrote a profile story about him, as I did all other candidates.
>>>> > > > > That
>>>> > > story
>>>> > > > > appeared in the Kings County Record June 22. A second story,
>>>> > > > > written
>>>> > by
>>>> > > > one
>>>> > > > > of my reporters, appeared on the same date, which was a report
>>>> > > > > on
>>>> the
>>>> > > > > candidates' debate held June 18.
>>>> > > > >
>>>> > > > > As I recall David Amos came last of four candidates in the
>>>> > > > > election.
>>>> > The
>>>> > > > > winner got 14,997 votes, while Amos got 358.
>>>> > > > >
>>>> > > > > I have attached the two stories that appeared, as well as a
>>>> > > > > photo
>>>> > taken
>>>> > > by
>>>> > > > > reporter Erin Hatfield during the debate. I couldn't find the
>>>> > > > > photo
>>>> > that
>>>> > > > > ran, but this one is very similar.
>>>> > > > >
>>>> > > > > Gisele McKnight
>>>> > > > > editor A1-debate A1-amos,David for MP 24.doc debate
>>> 2.JPG
>>>> > > > > Kings County Record
>>>> > > > > Sussex, New Brunswick
>>>> > > > > Canada
>>>> > > > > 506-433-1070
>>>> > > > >
>>>> > > >
>>>> > >
>>> Raising a Little Hell- Lively Debate Provokes Crowd
>>>
>>> By Erin Hatfield
>>>
>>> "If you don't like what you got, why don't you change it? If your
>>> world is all screwed up, rearrange it."
>>>
>>> The 1979 Trooper song Raise a Little Hell blared on the speakers at
>>> the 8th Hussars Sports Center Friday evening as people filed in to
>>> watch the Fundy candidates debate the issues. It was an accurate, if
>>> unofficial, theme song for the debate.
>>>
>>> The crowd of over 200 spectators was dwarfed by the huge arena, but as
>>> they chose their seats, it was clear the battle lines were drawn.
>>> Supporters of Conservative candidate Rob Moore naturally took the blue
>>> chairs on the right of the rink floor while John Herron's Liberalswent
>>> left. There were splashes of orange, supporters of NDP Pat Hanratty,
>>> mixed throughout. Perhaps the loudest applause came from a row towards
>>> the back, where supporters of independent candidate David Amos sat.
>>>
>>> The debate was moderated by Leo Melanson of CJCW Radio and was
>>> organized by the Sussex Valley Jaycees. Candidates wereasked a barrage
>>> of questions bypanelists Gisele McKnight of the Kings County Record
>>> and Lisa Spencer of CJCW.
>>>
>>> Staying true to party platforms for the most part, candidates
>>> responded to questions about the gun registry, same sex marriage, the
>>> exodus of young people from the Maritimes and regulated gas prices.
>>> Herron and Moore were clear competitors,constantly challenging each
>>> other on their answers and criticizing eachothers’ party leaders.
>>> Hanratty flew under the radar, giving short, concise responses to the
>>> questions while Amos provided some food for thought and a bit of comic
>>> relief with quirky answers. "I was raised with a gun," Amos said in
>>> response to the question of thenational gun registry. "Nobody's
>>> getting mine and I'm not paying 10 cents for it."
>>>
>>> Herron, a Progressive Conservative MP turned Liberal, veered from his
>>> party'splatform with regard to gun control. "It was ill advised but
>>> well intentioned," Herron said. "No matter what side of the house I am
>>> on, I'm voting against it." Pat Hanratty agreed there were better
>>> places for the gun registry dollars to be spent.Recreational hunters
>>> shouldn't have been penalized by this gun registry," he said.
>>>
>>> The gun registry issues provoked the tempers of Herron and Moore. At
>>> one point Herron got out of his seat and threw a piece of paper in
>>> front of Moore. "Read that," Herron said to Moore, referring to the
>>> voting record of Conservative Party leader Steven Harper. According to
>>> Herron, Harper voted in favour of the registry on the first and second
>>> readings of the bill in 1995. "He voted against it when it counted, at
>>> final count," Moore said. "We needa government with courage to
>>> register sex offenders rather than register the property of law
>>> abiding citizens."
>>>
>>> The crowd was vocal throughout the evening, with white haired men and
>>> women heckling from the Conservative side. "Shut up John," one woman
>>> yelled. "How can you talk about selling out?" a man yelled whenHerron
>>> spoke about his fear that the Conservatives are selling farmers out.
>>>
>>> Although the Liberal side was less vocal, Kings East MLA Leroy
>>> Armstrong weighed in at one point. "You’re out of touch," Armstrong
>>> yelled to Moore from the crowd when the debate turned to the cost of
>>> post-secondary education. Later in the evening Amos challenged
>>> Armstrong to a public debate of their own. "Talk is cheap. Any time,
>>> anyplace," Armstrong responded.
>>>
>>> As the crowd made its way out of the building following the debate,
>>> candidates worked the room. They shook hands with well-wishers and
>>> fielded questions from spectators-all part of the decision-making
>>> process for the June 28 vote.
>>>
>>> Cutline – David Amos, independent candidate in Fundy, with some of his
>>> favourite possessions—motorcycles.
>>>
>>> McKnight/KCR
>>>
>>> The Unconventional Candidate
>>>
>>> David Amos Isn’t Campaigning For Your Vote, But….
>>>
>>> By Gisele McKnight
>>>
>>> FUNDY—He has a pack of cigarettes in his shirt pocket, a chain on his
>>> wallet, a beard at least a foot long, 60 motorcycles and a cell phone
>>> that rings to the tune of "Yankee Doodle."
>>>
>>> Meet the latest addition to the Fundy ballot—David Amos.
>>>
>>> The independent candidate lives in Milton, Massachusetts with his wife
>>> and two children, but his place of residence does not stop him from
>>> running for office in Canada.
>>>
>>> One has only to be at least 18, a Canadian citizen and not be in jail
>>> to meet Elections Canada requirements.
>>>
>>> When it came time to launch his political crusade, Amos chose his
>>> favourite place to do so—Fundy.
>>>
>>> Amos, 52, is running for political office because of his
>>> dissatisfaction with politicians.
>>>
>>> "I’ve become aware of much corruption involving our two countries," he
>>> said. "The only way to fix corruption is in the political forum."
>>>
>>> The journey that eventually led Amos to politics began in Sussex in
>>> 1987. He woke up one morning disillusioned with life and decided he
>>> needed to change his life.
>>>
>>> "I lost my faith in mankind," he said. "People go through that
>>> sometimes in midlife."
>>>
>>> So Amos, who’d lived in Sussex since 1973, closed his Four Corners
>>> motorcycle shop, paid his bills and hit the road with Annie, his 1952
>>> Panhead motorcycle.
>>>
>>> "Annie and I rode around for awhile (three years, to be exact)
>>> experiencing the milk of human kindness," he said. "This is how you
>>> renew your faith in mankind – you help anyone you can, you never ask
>>> for anything, but you take what they offer."
>>>
>>> For those three years, they offered food, a place to sleep, odd jobs
>>> and conversation all over North America.
>>>
>>> Since he and Annie stopped wandering, he has married, fathered a son
>>> and a daughter and become a house-husband – Mr. Mom, as he calls
>>> himself.
>>>
>>> He also describes himself in far more colourful terms—a motorcyclist
>>> rather than a biker, a "fun-loving, free-thinking, pig-headed
>>> individual," a "pissed-off Maritimer" rather than an activist, a proud
>>> Canadian and a "wild colonial boy."
>>>
>>> Ironically, the man who is running for office has never voted in his
>>> life.
>>>
>>> "But I have no right to criticize unless I offer my name," he said.
>>> "It’s alright to bitch in the kitchen, but can you walk the walk?"
>>>
>>> Amos has no intention of actively campaigning.
>>>
>>> "I didn’t appreciate it when they (politicians) pounded on my door
>>> interrupting my dinner," he said. "If people are interested, they can
>>> call me. I’m not going to drive my opinions down their throats."
>>>
>>> And he has no campaign budget, nor does he want one.
>>>
>>> "I won’t take any donations," he said. "Just try to give me some. It’s
>>> not about money. It goes against what I’m fighting about."
>>>
>>> What he’s fighting for is the discussion of issues – tainted blood,
>>> the exploitation of the Maritimes’ gas and oil reserves and NAFTA, to
>>> name a few.
>>>
>>> "The political issues in the Maritimes involve the three Fs – fishing,
>>> farming and forestry, but they forget foreign issues," he said. "I’m
>>> death on NAFTA, the back room deals and free trade. I say chuck it
>>> (NAFTA) out the window.
>>>
>>> NAFTA is the North American Free Trade Agreement which allows an
>>> easier flow of goods between Canada, the United States and Mexico.
>>>
>>> Amos disagrees with the idea that a vote for him is a wasted vote.
>>>
>>> "There are no wasted votes," he said. "I want people like me,
>>> especially young people, to pay attention and exercise their right.
>>> Don’t necessarily vote for me, but vote."
>>>
>>> Although…if you’re going to vote anyway, Amos would be happy to have
>>> your X by his name.
>>>
>>> "I want people to go into that voting booth, see my name, laugh and
>>> say, ‘what the hell.’"
>>>
>>
>

 

 

 


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